Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman (1888), 30 Mar 1899, p. 2

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[m e: :Diotatas Where ' To Buu Your Slothss . do you serve your mu you place your orders 1 - for our When you need 2 out line logic and : Champions: Co. Ihe Victmia Loan and SAVINGS COMPANY Incorporated under Cap Half-yearly interest coupons are attached to the debentures, which are payab): on preset ta- tio: at the Comnany’s 0ffi3e or at any agency John Magwoon, Jamas LOW. â€"BARRE Dâ€"â€" PLYMOUTH ROCK EG Why Is out $15 Suit to order the best value in Lindsgy? Why a 13 hr 81. m 26 for $1.50, from. a. limited lot 0 c srphuly selected hens. ‘31 09.} Cock in yard was 'an prize winner at the Gleiph Poultry Show last December, when his size, in: {rted frnm New York was first. 54,“ Orders filled as received. L, 5 5 Logic and Reason we use only ALL-WOOL Meâ€" goods and BEST of trim- mings, no matter what the price. In view of all these facts you cannot afford to take chances by buying your clothing elsewhere. ‘f the Ontario Bank. describes the 18% in every particular- w 97..) (77,, Always to the front. supasses all others. The Lady’s is :a. mod: beauty of coloxinz- _ After three years Ina: w Chainless has come to stay. doubt ’tis the wheel of 1 Prices ranging from $30 to E and see them. DEPARTURE. Bonevmo llxed ....................... 6 60 mm Port. Ho nixed via. Bethany. ............ 6 15 mm Toronto ed vi; Whitby sud Port. Perry 5 50 gm Tomato m .............. . .. ......... 8 65 am Port Hope In] via. Peterboro .............. 11 03 gm Toronto Mixed m Lornovillo ........... . . .12 10 pm Haliburton Mixed. ........................ 3 00 pm Toronto Mail ............................. 6 20 pm Joboconk Mixed .. ...... . 630mm Port Hope Expreaavlz Peter‘ooro .......... 8 05 pm ARRIVALS. Hz'i‘onnon l!1xed.. . . .. . ...... ... Toronto Empress from Port. Hopo‘ Port Hope Mail from Toronto ..... Ooboconk hinted Port Hope Mixed from Port. Hope Toronto lull from Port Hope. . . . P911. Hope Express from Toronto Whitby Mixed .. Revillelixed.........r ....... The 11 0'3 mall for Po 1. Hope closes v. the P. 0.3.1 10. £5 a. m. The 8.65 mail 1 wt '1‘)ron'o clam st. 8. 30. The 11.00 mail gain. ' m rnh connects with the I. B .8; 0 RV. ...r.. Suits at $15, Special Yes. that is the ‘MI LaveL‘ndny ..... . InveJuuctinnu ............. .... Arrive“ 58. t0. Junction........ Arrive n. 1411361) ....... ............ Lava Bancroft .. laveJund‘nv- .. strive n Juno“ emnfmcrott The 3.00 p. :11. non!) tnin carries no mail. Cor. Kent and Cambridge-sts. GT. R. LOCAL TIME-TABLE President your interests bést when r orders with us, especially I. B. ' O. RAKLWAY. ed a suit or anything in and reason should bring you to us. G. '1‘. R. SERVICE. J OHN CAMPBELL ..... nnnnnn coo-0......- In Port Hope .......... a Toronto .......... . . . .f ’0“ Hope ............ .. from Toronto.......... .o-uouo-o. 9- ccccccc .o. nooocrnouooooo. ...... .- B. k. 0. SERVICE. no-o coo... ..... Wow Farm, Woodville it to order the the Crescent .v. Without It this Ye” of strength, and modest . 169, R. s. the future Secretary .. 8403.11: .. 8603.11: ..11003.11: ...10 10 am: .. 206p.m ...620p.m .. 7 53 p.m 8 00 p.m ".10 20 pan the P. 0. at .11 00 mm. . 2 w p.m. . 1 45 pun. . 5 15 p.n=. .11 20 gm . 2 3) pm .2009“: . 5 20 p.111 THE CLOSING HOURS. COMFORT The brigands their work. It W J csus was dying. often lingered 0n '1 n9 UL’léauuu ' their work. It was almost sundown. and Jesus was dying. Persons in crucifixion often lingered on from day to day, cry- ing, begging, cursing, .but Christ had been exhausted by years of maltreatment. Pillowless, poorly ted, flogged, as bent over and tied to a low post his bare back was inflamed with the securges inter- sticed with pieces of lead and bone, and now for whole hours the weight of his body hung on delicate tendons, and, ac- cording to custom, a violent stroke under the armpits had been given by the execu- tioner. Dizzy, nauseated, feverish, a world of agony is compressed in the two words, “I thirst!” Oh skies of Judea, let a drop of rain strike on his burning tongue! Oh, world, with rolling rivers and sparkling lakes and spraying foun- tains, give Jesus something to drink! If there be any pity in earth or heaven or hell, let it now be demonstrated in be- half of this royal sufferer. " T----~-1nm 11cm DIVA-1 â€"- 7 half of this royal sufferer. The wealthy women of Jerusalem used to have a. fund of money with which they provided wine for those people who died in crucifixionâ€"a powerful opiate to deaden the painâ€"but Christ would not take it. He wanted to die sober, and so he refused the wine. But afterward they go to a cup of vinegar and soak a sponge in it and put it on a stick of hyssop and then press it against the hot lips of Christ. You say the wine was an anaes~ theme and intended to relieve or deaden the pain. But the vinegar was an insult. In some lives the saccharine seems to predominate. Life is sunshine on a bank of flowers. A thousand hands to cla ap- proval. In December or in January, 00):- ing across their table, they see all their family present. Health rubicund. skies flamboyant, days resilient. But in a great many cases there are not so many sugars as acids. The annoyances, and the yen.- tions, and the disappointments of life ‘ overpower the successes. There is a gravel 1 in almost every shoe. An Arabian legend says that there was a worm in Solomon’s stafi gnawing its strength away, and there is a weak spot in every earthly support that a man leans on. King George of England forgot all the grand- ,____ .: 1.:5 +1~Mhfl hananse one dav in an Dlhyyv- ‘ George of England forgot all the grand- eurs of his throne because one day in an interview Beau Brummel called him by his first name and addressed him as a servant, cryin'g, “George, ring the bell!” Miss Langdon, honored all the world over for her poetic genius, is so worried over the evil reports set afloat regarding her that she is found dead with an empty bottle of prussic acid in her hand. Gold- smith seid that his life was a. wretched being, and that all that want and con- : tempt could bring to it had been brought, ‘L -â€" l .- 6‘». AM WA‘. v v.â€".... .._.. and cries out, “What, then, is there formidable in a jail?” Correggio’s flne painting is hung u for a tavern sign. i 110th cannot se 1 his best painting 1 except through a tame. Andrea del Sarto makes the great fresco in the Church of ‘ the Annunciata at Florence and gets for pay a sack of corn, and there are annoy- ances and vexations in high places as well as in low places, showing that in a great many lives are the sours greater than the sweets. “When Jesus therefore had received the vinegar.” It is absurd to suppose that a man who has always been well can sympathize with those who are sick, or that one who has always been honored can appreciate the sorrow of those who are despised, or ithat one who has been born to a great i fortune can understand the distress and the straits of those Who are destitute The fact that Christ himself took the vinegar makes him able to sympathize to-day and forever With all those \VhOSé 3 cup is filled with the sharp acids of this l life. He took the vinegar! In the first place, there was the sour- ness of betrayal. The treachery of Jude» hurt Christ’s: feelings more than all th( friendship of his disciples did him good. You have had many friends, but then was one friend unon whom you pu: especial stress. You feasted him. Y01 loaned him money. You befriended bin in the dark passes of life, when h! especially needed a. friend. Afterward, he turned upon you, and he took advantag of your former intimacies. He wrotv against you. He talked against you. ll niiscroscopized your faults. He flun- contempt at you, when you ought t( have received nothing but gratitude. A‘ first you could not sleep at night. The: you Went about with a sense of having : been stung. That difficulty will never b ‘ healed, for though mutual friends ma: arbitrate in the matter until you she shake hands, the old cordiality will neve- come back. Now I command to all sue. the sympathy of a betrayed Christ. Why they sold him for less than our sec They all forsook him and fled. They on him to the quick. He drank that cup 1,, the drega. He took the vinegar. There is also the sournesz of pair. There are some of you who have not see: a well day for many years. By keepiiv: out of drafts, and by carefully atudyin, dietetics, you continue to this time, b: oh. the headaches, and the side ache and the backaches, and the heartachv which have been your accompaniment 2:. the way through! You have struggli under a heavy mortgage of physical (ii abilities, and instead of the placidity tbs: once characterized you it is now on, with great eflort that you keep aw from irritability and sharp retort. 1m culties of respiration, of digestion, locomotion. make up the great obsuu , in your life, and you tug and swl: 5 along the pathway and wonder when t* : exhaustion will end. My friends, i:- ! brightest crowns in heaven will not i ‘ given to those who, in stirrups, flax-Ew- to the cavalry charge, while the genera applauded, and the sound of dilell'L. sabcrs rang through the land, but ti»: , brightest crowns in heaven, I believi i will be given to those who nudged (:2 mid chronic ailment: which unnmw their strength, yet all the time maintain in; their faith in God. It is comparatiw iy easy to fight in a meat of a. thou sand men, charging up tho parapem f.- the sound of mrtinl music, but it is no so easy to endure when no one but th- nursv and the doctor .20 the witnesses (3' the Christian tom Decides that. vm. FROM A SAD SCENE. AND . I and never had any pains worse than um“... The sharpness that stung through his brain, through his hands, through his feet, through his heart, were as great as yours certainly. He was as sick and as weary. Not a nerve or muscle or ligament escaped. All the pangs of all the nations of all the ages compressed into one sour cup. He took the vinegar! ings, and that aIWays gives an honest 3 man anxiety. There is no sign of destitu- tion about youâ€"pleasant appearance and a cheerful home for youâ€"but God only knows what a time you have had to man- age your private finances. Just as the bills run up the wages seem _to run down. you both rise up discouraged. You abridge here, and you abridge there, and you get things snug for smooth sailing, and, lo, suddenly there is a large doctor’s bill to pay, or you have lost your pocketbook, ‘ or some debtor has failed, and you are thrown beam end. Well, brother, you are in glorious company. Christ owned not the house in which he stopped or the colt on which he rode or the boat in which he sailed. He lived in a borrowed house; he was buried in a borrowed grave. Exposed to all kinds of weather, yet he had only one suit of clothes. He brmkfasted in the morning, and no one could possibly tell 1 where he could get anything to eat before night. He would have been pronounced a financial failure. He had to perform a miracle to get money to pay a tax bill. Not a. dollar did he own. Privation of domesticity, privation of nutritious food, privation of a. comfortable couch on which to sleep, privation of all worldly resources! The kings of the earth had chased chaliees out of which to drink. but Christ had nothing but a plain cup set before him. and it was very sharp, and it was very sour. He took the vine- gar. ._l anno- “oaum‘l aln‘nn‘ pay, or you have lost yo or some debtor has failed, thrown beam end. Well, 1 in glorious company. Oh the house in which he sto 501. There were years that, passed along before your family circle was invaded by death, but the moment the charmed cir- cle was broken everything seemed to dis- solve. Hardly have you put the black apparel in the wardrobe before yOu have again to take it out. Great and rapid changes in your family record. You got 1.--; ‘1... Uuallgwa A“ Ivv.â€" _.._ the house and rejoiced in it, but the charm was gone as soon as the crepe hung on the doorbell. The one upon whom you most depended was taken away from you. A cold marble slab lies on your heart to-day. Once, as the chil~ dren ramped through the house, you put your hand over your aching head and said, “Oh, if I could only have it still!” Oh, it is too still new! You lost your patience when the tops and the strings and the shells were left amid floor, but, oh, you would be willing to have the trmkcts scatterd all over the floor again if they were scattered by the same hands. With what a ruthless plowshare ber- With what a ruthless plowsnare Der- eavement rips up the heart! But Jesus knows all about that. You cannot tell him anything new in regard to hex-cave. 1 ment. He had only a few friends, and j when he lost one it brought tears to his eyes. Lazarus had often entertained him at his home. Now Lazarus is dead and buried, and Christ breaks down with emotion, the convulsion of grief shudder~ ing through all the ages of bereavement. Christ knows what it is to go through the house missing a. familiar inmate. Christ knows what it is to see an unoccu- pied place at the table. Were there not four of themâ€"Mary and Martha and Christ and Lazarus? Four of them. But where is Lazarus? Lonely and amicted Christ, his great loving eyes filled with tears! Oh, yes, yes! He knows all about ‘ the loneliness and the heartbreak. Ila 1 took the vinegar! - -- <- A‘ .- v "’_‘D"‘ V Then there is the tonnes: of the death hour. Whatever else we may escape, that acid sponge will be pressed to our lips. I sometimes have a. curiosity to know how I will behave when I come to die. Whether I will be calm or excited, Whether I will be filled with reminis- cence or with anticipation, I cannot say. But come to the point I must and you must. An officer from the future world will knock at the door of our hearts and serve on us the writ of ejectment. and we will have to surrender. And we will wake up after these autumnal and Win- try and vernal and summary glories have vanished from our vision. We will wake up into a. realm which has only one son- ~son and. that the season of everlasting love. But you say: “I don’t want to break out from my present; associations. It is so chilly and so damp to go down the stairs of that vault. 1 don’t want anything ‘ .lrawn so tightly over my eyes. If there 1 were only some way of breaking through 3 z.he partition between worlds without ‘ .earing this body all to shreds! I wonder at the surgeons and the doctors cannot :ompound a. mixture by which this body Lnd soul can all the time be kept to .-;ether? 13 there no escape from this epumtion‘!” None, absolutely none. A great many men tumble through the :ates of the future, as it were, and we do lot know where they have gone. and they only add gloom and mystery to the aassage, but Jesus Christ so mightily ztormed the gates of that future world but they have never since been closely amt. Christ knows what it is to leave :his world, of the beauty of which he vzis more appreciative than we ever could ‘ no. He knows the exquisiteness of the ghosphorescence of the sea. He trod it. .710 knows the glories of the midnight mavens, for they were the spangled cam- ;py of his wilderness pillow. He knows them: the lilies. He twisted them into his ermon. He knows about the towls of :he air. They whirred their way through -is discourse. He knows about the ser- rows of leaving this beautiful world. Not s taper was kindled in the darkness. He lied physicianless. He died in cold sweat ,nd dizziness and hemorrhage and agony, ‘mt have put him in sympathy with all me dying. He goes through Christen- m and he gathers up the stings out of THE WATCHMAN-WARDEB: many gensmnions. The sponge is soak- --F. in the sorrows of all those who have ‘ “ml in their beds, as well as soaked in ‘ '22:; sorrows of all those who perished in or fiery martyrdom. While heaven .2 .5 pitying, :22: : earth was mocking, and 11 was dwuli- 22:, he took the vinegar! Jo all 2.122.522 In whom. life has been an mun-l ivyâ€"a. dose 1211837 could not swallow, 2-. draft; aim-.6 50L their teeth on edge and 22:53 ingml pm :2- h the omnipotent sym- 452:! h" of Jean: K h! 151;. The sister of Her- John-l the 2.5mm) 22mm, usedto spend much 2-1 mar tlmu mils}! ing the telescope! $21? :u;:h “11101, bk: brought the distant .v 32 his high, andi. is my ambition now [Hi-‘2 Hour SOC :Lcm‘ £118 lens of your spirit- u -.2 M11111. 9. 1 '1.. 1, looking througix the 3:111: 1211:1165 u; 5 nu- earthly troubles, you . gu‘» berme {1911 r’ 1 mus 00113301183101! 0: :1. “.11 mu 131 n31:2‘..‘-7 and a. Snflour‘a 10". 1 me death billows, fand he puts them .zder his own neck and head. He gathers 1his own tongue the burning thirsts râ€"â€", I W sins worse than Christ's. your that stung through his his hands, through his a heart, were as great as He was as sick and as rvc or muscle or ligament a pangs of all the nations omprcsscd into one sour e vinegar! the sourness of poverty. as not meet you outgo- i always gives an honest? here is no sign of destitu- ‘ - leasant appearance and for you--but God only mt! vou have had to man- Oh, my friends, do not try to carry all ills alone. Do not put your poor nder the Apennines, when the Christ is ready to lift up all your burdens. When you have a trouble of any kind, you rush this way and that way, and you wonder what this man will say about it and what that man will say about it, and you try this prescription and that prescription and the other pre- scription. Oh, Why do you not {,0 straight to the heart of Christ, knowing that for our own sinning and suflering race he tc ok the vinegar? There was a vessel that had been tossed on the seas for a great many weeks and been disabled, and the supply A_J 4.1... “Mm WPTP. shoulder 11 UK Uh qu 1-....- There was a vessel that had been tossed on the seas for a great many weeks and been disabled, and the supply of water gave out, and the crew were dying of thirst. After many days they saw a sail against the sky. They signalled it. When the vessel came nearer, the p00- ple on the suffering ship cried to the captain of the other vessel: “Send us some water. We are dying for lack of water.” And the captain on the vessel that was hailed responded: “Dip your buckets Where you are. You are in the mouth of the Amazon, and there are scores of miles of fresh water all around 1 about you and hundreds of. feet deep.” ‘ And then they dropped their buckets over the side of the vessel and brought up the clear, bright, fresh water and put out the fire of their thirst. So I hail you today, after a long and perilous voyage, thirsting as you are for pardon and thirsting for comfort and thirsting for eternal life, and I ask you what is the use of your going in that death struck state While all around you is the deep, clear, Wide, Sparkling flood of God’s sym- pathetic mercy. Oh, dip your buckets and drink and live forever. “Whosoever will, let him come and. take of the water of life freely.” Yet there as: people who refuse this divine svnmathv. and try to fight their Yet there 31!: people who refuse this divine sympathy, and try to fight their own battles, and drink their own vine- gar, and carry their own burdens, and their life, instead of being a triumphal march from victory to victory, will be a hobbling on from defeat to defeat, until they make final surrender to retributive disaster. Oh, I wish I could to-day gather up in my arms all the woes of men and women, all their heartaches, all their dis- appointments, all their chagrins, and just take them right to the feet of a sympa- thizing Jesus. He took the vinegar. Nana Sahib, after he had lost his last battle in India, fell back into the jungles of Iheri â€"â€"jungles so full of malaria. that no mor- tal can live there. He carried with him also a ruby of great luster and of great value. He died in those jungles. His body was never found, and the ruby has 1 never yet been recovered. And I fear , that tor-day there are some who will fall back from this subject into the sicken~ ing, killing jungles of their sin carrying a gem of infinite valueâ€"a priceless soul â€"â€"to be lost forever. Oh, that that ruby might flash in the eternal coronation! But, no! There are some, I fear, who turn away from this ofl'ered mercy and comfort and divine sympathy, notwith- standing that Christ. for all who would accept his grace, trudged the long way, % and suffered the laeemting thongs, and received in his face the expectorations of the filthy mob. and for the guilty, and the discouraged, and the diseomforted of the race, took the vinegar. May God Al- mighty break the infatuation and lead you out into the strong hope, and .the good cheer, and the glorious sunshine of this triumphant gospel! Btrnnxo Lnngnagol. On Gomera Island, one of the Canar- ies, the inhabitants employ a strange mode of speech, that of whistling. Each syllable has its own tone. The whistler uses both fingers and lips, and the con- versation can be carried on at a mile’s distance. This whistling language is said to be confined to Gomera Island. and is quite unknown to the other islands of the group. The adoption of this mode of speech is due to the geological formation of the island, which is intersected fre- quently by gullies and ravines. As there ‘ are no bridges, intercourse between neighbors is often difficult. A man liv- ing within a stone’s throw of his neigh- bor may have to go many miles around to call on him, and this inconvenience led to the cultivation of whistling as a means of conversation. The natives of the Cameroons. on the west coast of Africa, use the drum hing- uage. The surface of the drum is diVided into two eq nal parts and yields two dis- tinct notes. By varying the intervals between the notes, a complete code of ; signals for every syllable in the language is produced, by means of which messages . may be quickly sent from village to vill- age. Hsrd Work. Boys, do not shun hard work. G0 at, it, rejoice in it. It; is a. blessing to you. And understand us. By real hard work we do not. mean study, or sticking close- 1y to keeping books, keeping store or teaching school, or any of the professional pursuits. These are all honorable and when followed closely exhaust the nerv- ous energy and make. men tired too. But; by hard work we mean work that re- quires a great deal of muscular force, such as chopping, rolling logs, quarrying rock, doing (urpenter work, laying brick, carrying thn. hod, and working in the forges, furnaces, rolling mills, mzznes and ngrushbps. Thié kind Bf work develops muscular strength, the power of physical endurance, grit, courage andgoofl; heftlph. Said an old man, now up in the eight;- ies; to me a. year ago, “When I was fifteen years old I was a weak‘ splndly kind of a boy, and went; into a black- smith shop, learned the trade, worked at. it; eighteen years, and forged out. a con- tsltution worth a million dollars." He has ever since been a. healthy, vigorous man, and old as he is, still walks the. streets, pert, cheerful and straight as an Indian’s arrow. Hard work is good medicine for boys, and especially for young men. Royal Use for the l’houograph. Nothing pleases a. bzu‘baric monarch more than some wonderful machine of European invention which seems to have a. touch of magic. Mcnelik of Abyssinia has been enchantuvl by hearing the Queen’s message to him in her own tones interpreted by the wimnograph. The. de- livery of the mesmga “my. a. most. cere- monious affair. an :zrmhsry salute being fired in honor of the Queen :13 soon as the message bud barn u‘mm‘nd. no“ Heavxk hum-mi Church. St. Paul‘s Car await-ah London. is the most heavily insumi buihiim; in Great Britain. It is inSu-n:-.l for 2R‘175,«_;00 in ten emcee. Two women urw .i‘mployu'l as track Walkers on a section ai’ the Central Pacific. Railroad east, at Wells, Nev. LINDSAY. ONT. Femala v. rack K1. «nun-I. It Dont Pay Little Britain 1 Business Houses You Little Britain DrugStore LITTLE BRITAIN PLANIIIG GHOPPINI} MILLS ALWAYS 0N HAND. I. J. RICH.) Do You Want Farm Implements? A First Class Meat Shop in connec- tion ; Fresh Beef, Lamb, Pork, Sausages. Smoked and Dried Ham. Come and get prices before you purchase elsewhere. can buy anything you need in the . ..way of... ..... HARNESS. HARDWARE. â€"Doors, Sash, louidings. â€"latched Lumber. â€"-Rough Lumber, Bill Stuff. â€"Lath Shingles and Lime. â€"Best Grades Hal-g! Coal on hand at 18(1) â€"Drugs, Dyes. â€"â€"Patent Medicines -And Drug Store Staples at To wear shabby clothes when a New Up-to-date Suit can be pur- chased so cheaply from . . . J, J. The Tailor, Little RICH, Britain. A nice stock of Tweeds, Worsteds, etc., to select from, and a perfect fit is guaranteed in all cases, Drop in and see me if you are thinking of ordering a New Suit or Pair of Trousers. The price willpe right, THE LITTLE BRITAIN FOUNDRY AND MACHINE SHOP JIUUUCID. Lllv PCFVV -v __ r- _ r , , , and your Clothes ready when promised. ISAAC MCKEE, Ikeep only the best MASSEY-HARRIS Goodc. Bicycles. Cultivators,:Drills, Mow crs, Tcdders, Rakes, Reapers, and Bind- ers. Also a full stock of Flows and Scufllexs, Bnin Wagons and Toronto Windmills. â€" vivafiposa Station. CHOPPMG done every day. Stone or Roller work. Come early in the day and avaf: the Bush. Has every facility for filling up and putting in thorough Repair all classes of Farm Implements and machinery. Engine and Boiler Repair. ing a special“. - YEREX, Little Britain The Tailor, Little Britain ‘£ THEâ€"â€" a MAUNDER Practical Machinist, FRBM an UIITIL APRIL FIRST WE SELL: There’s nothing like Leather When it’s well put Together. 1500 It Never Pays E. E. DILLZVAN [ADIES ! Little Britain Furniture Store. CLEARING UUT SA ou’t’ih 511 sorts of WINTER GOODS 3251):;sz . . . to clean them out even at a big discon Our usual stock of good FRESH GRO IES always on hagd: “ nvvn - “I! come under this head and we are “E E. PRDUSE, 0AM“ â€" Hex}: 7 you tried our SLGARS a 25 [38: FOR THE DOLLAR Can be ruined by a poor blacksmith. Bring your shoeing to me. I can tell you what. 18 best for your horses‘ feet, and 1 an do the work. I have experience. 1 take pdnsâ€"téngogreatest of pains to dl work right. Stock and good Work- manship make my . . . WeIdon Co equal to my. I am going to compete 1: those who sell the cheapest. Ask about it. Blacksmith and Carriage Builder. The Best in the Wm The season is here for a general €193.”thth S Little Britain Tin and His Harness has I). stood reputation E deserves it. The Stock and Workmaxysh! are both first-class and the prices nib Eek knows the Harness Business and 3‘ iisfies his customers. Repairing a spec!M All sorts of Saddlers' Supplies. TU E§5AY IN 1 the date in mind. GLOVES, FLANNELS, OVERCOATS, HOSIERY. E10. IF YOU WANT A SET OF HARNESS The stove business is my business. I sell the Gurney Stoves and Ranges. I also sell the best of TIN WARE. I make a specialty of all work in TIN, GALVANIZED Inox and PLUMBING. My stock of Stove and Household Utensils is com- Emiggownezis to b? flame“ 3: msk purc iases o . ’ HORSE GOODS, or “351% matter of REBAIRING. In the features which go to make ill a desirable place to trade, We kn“ that we are at: the head. ' °" absolute reliability, prices that at reasonable and fair, and a a: stock with judicious selection q goods, render our place a desim one on which to bestow you,“ We know we can offer advanuh and to this end we solicit, F601 favors. ple‘ . MARCH 30TH, A GOOD HORSE DR. 3. NEELAN DS, When you want a New piece at FURNITURE for the house am go away to Toronto or some 0 place. Buy it here in yourm village. I keep the dainties things in L'PHOLSTERED Goons A Table, 3. Fancy Chair, 3 Lounge a} Sofa. Perhaps it's half-anew Chairs or 3 Bedroom Set: vou Wm Even if it is a Parlor Suite buy it, from me. Wagons and Carriages $16 09 Single Harness for 14 (X) 12 m M u 10 (I) “ “ DENTXST, - LINDSAY Will be at JEflK/N'S f Little Britai”. on 131: FOL‘ John Eek. REPAIRS on Short Nome" PatrOnize me. \V. J. Yea RICH, SMITH! “Blue Flam JOHN ECK. Little Yours truly, EVERY MONTH Stove btore . RUSLAND] dihesptir; 1E1 Andtbekiss Imthefiueoft': out: psy'bink ”finch: watexs an a d bluebirds “thumbinc Thehyscnsc Oflhfidling pol: hmfieunh, Edam suggestion (Nth mlin’s note ; than! the new eras klkhlm “did the wimu Watchma KENT STRE fl; MARC THESE h KORNIN “’89“ ISIS her

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