Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman (1888), 1 Jun 1899, p. 2

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he an: ”‘0', or it may 'INDJ 2" mon and wialt KE M3 sf. y fa >utt Yer .ti 401 This is your own County Company. Farm Prepeny, Countrv Schools and Churcba only are insured by this Company. Blanket Policie= are issued. John Magwood, James Low. Debentures issued for periods of from one to five yeats for sums of $100 and upwards. Interest coupons attached. payable barf-yeaxly at4petccnt. - . ‘ 77,.AL â€".â€"'-rvâ€" - Deposits of $1 .00 and upwaxd taken, with- drawable at any time, upon which current rates of interest will be allowed. Wmth While to Watch our Windows Farmers Company to On town and farm property atficurrent rates of interest. Costs moderate, and no delay. Tâ€"hâ€"ew Victoria Loan and SAVINGS COMPANY Incorporated undor Cap. 169, I Head Office, LINDSAY, Om. an. -â€"-_.__ 'fie best diessed people in town wear our Shoes. No trouble to show goods. These are some of the points on which we have built up our present large Business. ‘ ,,‘9‘ 2.. A-“ CAMPERS Should take with them a supply of Dr. Fowler’s Ext. of . “ Wild Strawberry. [ 1 i‘rompt treatment, with Dr. Fowler's. Strawberry in such cases relieves the pain, checks the diarrhoea and prevents serious '9'; consequences. Dorr't “,3, take chances of 59011- ~ ing a whole summer's outing through neglect of putting a bottle of this great diarrhoea doctor in with your supplies. But see that it's the genuine Dr. Fowler's Extract of \Vild Strawbern', as most of the imitations are highly dail- gerous. ' l-- 0 98 EN? CPR CPR CPR CF‘R GPR 0n? Far “The Ufa aw! Achicwe'renu of Aimgnl Dvwey.” vm. worm’. am axes: ruva. hero. By Murat, Halstead, [he lite 1m: {no-m! and admirer of {jig n .ti m’s Mm. 8:21;“! and bwt. bu-k; - Vrzr- 500 pagan-’- 3 x H) incbcs newly 100 pages half to w “1qu \=. m7 Only $1.0). Ynormous demand. Bi: eumnmq 0n tit. .-. -. Chance of a. lif-fime. Write qmcg, The m mini n Company, 3rd Floor Caxton 1511-- Clmag o â€"â€":L. CPR CPR CPI? CPR CPR CPR C PR CPR CPR Savings Department G. Cornefl, HONEY TO LOAN lers’ Union Mutual fire Insurance Gompanu. when you insure SECRETARY All) AGENT . 8 William Street, Lindsay.‘ for just now they’re dressed with men’s and w omen’s Spring shoe stylesâ€"as usual, best and most select line in best a town. When you buy your Shoes at this store you know that you have not paid too much for them; that they are the correct style; and that they will wear well. Upper Lake fiervice Ev. r T. e-dwy. Thursday and Sa- turn-u an i ..» swam. «t unusual), 52- an hm: ALBEMA, ATHABASCA and ,HMTHBA ‘ui‘u leave OWcu tound at 5. .0 p u‘. airt!’ urnval of SS. Express having l‘oro to a' 1.30 p m. cunn- cuu . “in be m-de at. Sault SW. .\l s ie wd Porn Avian and Fort Wtéfianl ‘ If an poms; WBaKo. Assistant Gwen! Passenger agent, 1 511:3 Sgufia £431, Tmouto. T. C. 1“ TCHFTT, Ast. 50 Kent-st u may, um. cm, cm cm 6’3 cnp . WHITE. President C. E. McPHERSON, 5 GENTS WANTED Those who intend going camping this summer should take with them Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw- berry. Cettmg net, ca ch- ing cold, drinking “a- ter that is not always pureoreatingfoodthat ,3 patronize , the: Bisagrees, fizzy bring on an attack 0t COllC, Cra mp5 and Dianhoea. Secretary Lindsay '5 Leading Shoe Star: or}? 6‘ PR CPR CPR CPR CPR CPR CP/i ’l'Pv? MI. W wâ€"â€"--~ In discussing the final destiny nation It makes all the diflerence World whether we are on the “ funeral or a. wedding. The Bibll no doubt on this subject.‘ In pull THE DANGERS OF THE NATION. nonopoly the Hydra-new Threatens the Existeua lieâ€"What Is Wrong for to Do, Ought to Bo ‘ Corp crate Monopoly A peacg ““5101. I propose to name some of the suitors 1 who are claiming the hand of this repub- lic. This land is so fair, so beautiful, so amuent that it has many suitors, and it will depend much upon your advice whether this or that shall be accepted or rejected. In the first place, I remark: There is a greedy, all grasping monster who comes in as suitor seeking the hand of this republic, and that monster is known by the name of monopoly. His scepter is made out of the iron of the rail track and the wire of telegraphy. He does everything for his own advantage and for the robbery of the people. Things went on from bad to worse until in the three legislatures of New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania for a long time monopoly decided everything. If monopoly favor a law, it passes; if mon~ opoly oppose a law, it is rejected. Mon- opoly stands in the railroad depot putting into his pockets in one year $200,000, 000 in excess of all reasonable charges for services. Monopoly holds in his one hand the steam pOWel' of locomotion and in the other the electricity of swift communica~ tion. Monopoly has the Republican party R EV. concourse, I hear so many of the muffled drums of evil prophecy sounded, as though we were on the way to national interment, and beside Thebes and Baby lon and Tyre in the cemeterv of dead nations our republic was to be entombed, that I wish you to understand it is not to be obsequies, but nuptials: not mau- soleum. but carpeted altar; not cypress, but orange blossoms; not requiem, but wedding march; for “thy land shall be But monopoly is‘ not now as when (m'ma' Buchanan the n." one of our 92“! 19 the manna-x- ' "“ company ‘ lie lltn') .JZCd .- found Sen UAUXI. “Vuvyv- ”uâ€" -w- __ in one pocket and the Democratic party in the other pocket. Monopoly decides nominations and electionsâ€"city elections. state elections, national elections. With bribes he secures the votes of legislators, giving them free passes. giving appoint- ments to ; needy relatives to lucrative positions. employing them as attorneys if they_are lawyers, carrying their goods 15 per cent. less if they are merchants, and if he find a case very stubborn as well as very important put? down before him the hard cash of briberâ€" \ionop 01y brazen-faced, iron-fingered. vulture-hearted monopoly, ofiers his hand to this republic. He stretches it out over I the lakes and up the great railroads and over the telegraph poles of the continent. and says: “Here are my heart and hand. _13e mine forever.” Let the ,millions of E the pu.ple, north south, 'east and west . for bid the been“. of that marriage, forbid them at the ballot box, forbid them on the platform. forbid them by great organizations, forbid them by the over- “helning sentiment of an outraged n1ti0n,f0ruid them by the protest of the church of God, forbid them by prayer to high h aven. That Heer shall not have this Abigail. It shall not be to aLl- devour- ing mo opol 37' that this land is to be married. . ‘ ‘ ‘ ' ugliness, and in the United States pro- poses to take the wealth of 60101‘ 70‘ millions of people and put it in afcw silken Witness. Another suitor claiming the hand of Ibis repub. ic is nihilism. He 6wmnonh’ing but a knife for uni- versal cutthroatery and a. nitroglycerin bomb for universal explosion. He believes Hydra-Headed Evil That he Existence of the Repub- I Wrong for the Individual hi: to Be Wrong for tha _..Rev. Dr. Tal- :ii. 4, “Thy land in no Gol, no governn- e 16, no heaven and no hell except what he can make on earth. He slew the Czar of Russia. keeps many a king practically imprisoned, killed Abraham Lincoln, would put to death every king and president on earth, and, if he had the power, would climb up untfl he could drive the God of heaven from his throne and take it himself, the universal butcher. In France it is called communism; in the United States it is called anarchism; in Russia. it is called nihilism, but that last is the most graphic and descriptive term. It means complete and eternal smashup. It would make the holding of property a crime, and it would drive a. dagger through your heart and put a. torch to your dwelling and turn over this Whole land into the posses- sion of theft and lust and rapine and murder. Where does this monster live? In all the towns and cities of this land. It ofl'ers its hand to this fair republic. It proposes to tear to pieces the ballot box. the legis- lative hall, the congressional assembly. It would take this land and divide it up, or rather, divide it down. It would give as much to the idler as to the worker, to the lied as to the good. Nihilism! This panther having prowled across other lands has set its paw on our soil, audit is only waiting for the time in which to spring upon its prey. It was nihilism that burned the railroad property at Pittsburg during the great riots; it was nihilism that slew black people in our northern cities during the war; it was nihilism that mauled to death the Chi- nese immigrants years ago: it is nihilism that gleros out of the windows of the drunkeries upon sober people as they go by. Ah, its power has never yet been tested. I pray God its power may never be fully tested. It would, if it had the pOWer, leave every church, chapel, cathe~ dral, schoolhouse and college in ashes. Wat, wuvvauvuâ€"v ...__ -, Let me say it is the worst enemy of the laboring classes in any country. The honest cry for reform lifted by oppressed laboring men is drowned out by the vociferation for anarchy. The criminals and the vagabonds who range through our cities talking about their rights, when their first right is the penitentiaryâ€"if they could be hushed up, and the down- trodden laboring men of this country could be heard, there would be more bread for hungry children. In this land, 1 riot and bloodshed never gained any wages for the people or gathered up any ‘ prosperity. In this land the best weapon is not the club, not the shillclah, not fire- arms, but the ballot. Let not our op- pressed laboring men be beguiled to coming under the bloody banner of nihil- ism. It will make your taxes heavier, your Wages smaller, your table scantier. your children hungrier. your suffering greater. Yet this nihilism, with feet red of slaughter, comes forth and ofiers its hand for this republic. Shall the banns be proclaimed? If so, where shall the marriage altar be? and who will be the officiating priest? and what will be the music? That altar will have to be white with bleached skulls, the officiating priest must be a dripping assassin, the music must be the smothered groan of mvititudincus victims, the garlands must be twisted of night shade. the fruits must be apples of Sodom. the wine must be the blood of St. Bartholomew’s massacn. No! It is not to be to nihilism, the sangu- , inary monster, that this land is to be \ married. W-â€"v Another suitor for the hand 6! thisl nation is infidelity. When the midnight ruifians despoiled the grave of A. '1‘. Stewart in St. Marks’ churchyard every- body was shocked; but infidelity proâ€" poses something worse than thatrâ€"the robbing of all the graves of Christendom of the hope of a resurrection. It proposes to chisel out from the tombstones of your Christian dead the words “Asleep in Jeâ€"zus, ” and substitute the Words. “Oblit- motionâ€"annihilation.” Infidelity ro- poses to take the letter from the wor d’s 1 Father, inviting the nations to virtue and i happiness. and tear it. up into fragments ‘ so small that you cannot read a word of i it. It proposes to take the consolation from the hmkenhcnrted and the soothing pillow from the dying. Infidelity pro- poses to swear in the President of the United States. and the supreme court, and the governors of states. and the wit- nesses in the courtroom with their right hand on Painc's “Age of Benson.” or Voltaire's “Philosophy of History." It proposes to take away from this country the book that mnkes the difference be- tween the United States and the kingdom of Dahomey. between American ciivlim- tion and liornesinn cannibalism. If infi- delity could destroy the Scriptures, it would in 200 years turn the civilized nations hack to semi-barbarism. and then from semi-barbarian into midnight savagery, until the morals of n menngerie of tigers, rattlesnakes and chimpanzees Would be better than the morals of the shipwrecked human race. a o; 11 A, {he onlv impulse in the right direction that this World has ever had has come from the Bible. It was the mother of Roman law and of healthful jurisprud- ence. That book has been the mother of i all reforms and all charitiesâ€"mother of ' English magna charta and American l declaration of independence. Benjamin Franklin, holding that holy book in his hand, stood before an infidel club in Paris and read to them out of the prophe- eies of Habakkuk, and the lnildels, not knowing what book it was. declared it was the best poetry they had ever heard. ‘ That book brought George Washington down on his knees in the snow at Valley Forge. and led ti" , dying Prince Albert to ask some one to sing. “Rock of Ages.” I tell you that the worst attempted crime of the century is the attempt to destroy this book. Yet infidelity, loath- some, stenchful, leprous, pestii'erous, rotten monster, stretches out its hand, ichorous with the second death, to take the hand of this republic. It stretches it out through seductive magazines, and ‘ through lyceum lectures. and through caricatures of religion. It asks-tor all that ‘ part of the continent already fully settled and the two-thirdsnot yet counted. It says: “Give me all east of the Mississippi. with the keys of the church and with the Christian printing: presses. ‘Thcn give me Wyoming, give me Alaska. give me ‘ Montana, give me Colorado, give me all the states west of the . Mississippi . and ,I .Wlll take those places and keep them by rightbf possession long before the gospel can be fully intrenched.“ ‘- . «. - - £ uuu [JG 1.qu V JJAUL UAJV JJJJJ . And thiF: suitor presses his case appalâ€" l lingly. Shall the hnnns of that marriage ‘ be 'proclznmed? “No!” 983* the -homo l missianaries of .the West. a nmrsyr band 1 of whom the world isnm; wort-by, toiling amid fatigues and malaria. and starva- tion. "‘No. not; if‘ we can help it. By .- what *0 and our children have» suffered 5 \VO forbid the barns of that marriage!” { “‘No!" shy ‘all patriotic voices. Hour 111- : stitutions were boughtfiat mo (163.1"8; price 3 land were defended. at. aooxgreat a sacrifice j to be so chmply surrendere .” “No!” i says the God of Bunker Hill and Inde- THE WATCHMAN-WARDER: LINDSAY. 0V7. governne 15, no heaven this land shall not be married!” But there is another suitor that pre- sents his claim for the hand of this re- public. He is mentioned in the verse fol- lowing my text where it says. “As the bridegroom rejoiceth over the bride, so shall thy God rejoice over thee.” It is not It is the figure of the! Bible. Christ is so desirous to have this world love him that he stops at no humiliation of simile, He compares his grace to spit- tle on the eyes of the blind man. 116 com res himself to a hen gathering the chic ens. and in my text he compares himself to a suitor begging a hand in marriage. Does this Christ, the King. deserve this land? Behold Pilate’s hall } and the insulting expectoration on the face of Christ. Behold the Calvarean ‘ massacre and the awful hemorrhage of five wounds. Jacob served 14 years for Rachel, but Christ, my Lord, the King. suffered in torture 33 years to win the love of this world. As often princesses at their very birth are pledged in treaty of marriage to princes or kings of earth, so this nation at its birth was pledged to Christ for Divine marriage. Before Col- umbus and his 120 men embarked on the Santa Maria, the Pinta and the Nine for their wonderful voyage. what was the last thing they did? They sat down and took the holy sacrament of the Lord Jesus Christ. After they caught the first glimpse of this country and the gun or one ship had announced it to the other vessels that land had been discovered, what was the song that went up from all the three decks? “Gloria in excelsis.” After Columbus and his 120 men had ‘ stepped from the ship’s deck to the solid 1 ground, what did they do? They all [ knelt and consecrated the new world to I God. What did the Huguenots do after "'1 ~A. 2:3 51U\|IA\., 'v -â€"v kn It and consecrated the new world to God. What did the Huguenots do alter they landed in the Carolinas? What did the Holland rein ees do after they had landed in New ork? Whatjlid the Pil- grim Fathers do after they landed in New England? Wish bended knee and uplifted {ace and heavenobesiegmg prayer, they took possession of this continent for God. How was the first American con- gress opened? By prayer. in the name of Jesus Christ. From its birth this nation was pledged tor holy marriage with Christ. - - _ . .l And then see how good God has been to us! Just open the map of the continent and see how it is shaped for immeasur- able prosperltles. Navigable rivers, more in number and greater than of any other land, rolllng down on all sides into the sea. prophesying large manufactures and easy commerce. Look at the grwt ranges of mountalns timbered with wealth on the tops and sides, metalled with wealth underneath. One hundred and eighty thousand square miles of iron. The land so contoured that extreme watcher hardly ever lasts more than three daysâ€"extreme heat or extreme cold. Climate for the most part bracing and favorable for brawn and brain. All fruits, all minerals, all harvests. Scenery displaying an autumnal pageantry that no land on earth pretends to rival. .\'o South Amer- ican mrthquakm No Scotch mists. No London fogs. No Egyptian plagues. No Germanic divisions. The people of the United States are happier than any peo- ple on earth. It is the testimony of every man that has travelled abroad. For the poor. more sympathy; for the industries, more opportunity. Oh. how good God was to our fathers, and how good he has been to us and our children. To himâ€" blessod be his mighty nameâ€"to him of cmss and triumph, to him who still re- members the prayer of the Huguenots and Holland refugees and the Pilgrim Fathersâ€"to him shall this land be mar- ried. Oh, you Christian patriots. by your contributions and your prayers hasten on the fulfillment of the text. We have been turning on important leaf in the mighty tome of our national history. One year at the gates of this continent over 500,000 emigrants arrived. I was told by the commissioner of emigra- tion that the probability Was that in that one year 600.000 emigrants would arrive at the different gates of commerce. Are you afraid this continent is going to be overcrowded with its population? Ah, that shows you have not been to California, that shows you have not been to Oregon, that. damn you have not- been to Texas. A fishing smack zoâ€"day on Lake Ontario might as well be afraid of being crowdedlby other shipping before night as for any one of the next; ten gen- erations of Americans to be afraid of be- yet the Austrian empire supports 35.000,- 000 people. The one state of Texas is larger than all France. and France sup ports 36,000,000 people. The one state of Texas fur surpasses in size the German empire, yet the Germanic empire supports 41,000,000 people. I tell you the great want of the western states is more popu. Intion. ing overcrowded by foreign populations in this country. The one state of Texas is far larger than all the Austrian empire, While some people may stand at the gates of the city saying, “Stay ouch!” to foreign nopulntions, I press out us for be- yond those gates as I can press out be- yond them and beckon to foreign nations, saying. “Come, come. all ye people who are honest. and industrious and God lov- ing!" But say you. “I um so afraid that they. will bring their prejudices for for- eign governments and plant them here.” Absurd. They are sick of the govern- ments that have oppressed them. and they want free America! .Give them the great gospel of Welcome. Throw around them-r all Christian hospitalities. They will add their industry and‘hard earned. wages to, this country, and then we will dedicpte .‘oll to Christ and “thy land shall be married.” But where shall the marriage altar‘be? Let it be 310. Rocky Mountains, when, through artificial and mighty irrigation. all their tops shallabo covered. as they will he, with vineyards and orchards and grain fields. Then let the Bostons undtho New Yorks and the Charlestons of the Pacific coast come to the marriage alitur on one side. and then let the Bostons and the New Yorks and the Churlestons of the Atlantic coast come to the nmrr“ me altar on the other side, ‘ and there *tween them let this bride of ‘ nations kneel, and then 'if the orgun of i the loudestvthunders that eyer shook the ‘ Sierra Nevada on the one side or moved the foundations of the. Alleghanies on the 033116? side Should open full diupuson of- ‘Wedding march, that organ of thunders- ’ could not drown the voice of him who. would take the hand at this bride of nations, 335' 1383‘ “as a bridegroom rem , joice‘th over a bride. so thv God rl-juiceth . ove: thee.” Atthot man-Legs banquet the ; platters shou'bc' ot. Nevada. silver. and the chalices'of Cafifornia. gum and the fruits of'northernfommfis and the spices of lsouthern‘ may find.’ the tapestry of ‘ American 'manflfaoture and the congratu- 3 mtions frorn the free nations or earth and. ifrom all the triumphant armies of hen.- vent 439.50 "thy 339d Shall be married. ” THB HOWBI’ SHOW Spring Roller Shades W. A. LOODWIN, on manhunt-mu during aspen-pug! '99 Thu staunch stunner is now fined with 3 hurricane deck Ind canvu “min;- on bod: decks. 3nd by recent impro «menu in machinery the nu Lave! tau: than over. Her carrying apncity ittbont 200 mgoqa. qryhon Wm bv thy Excmsioa Bug 0 (whichis m infirm condition sud is Moo belngz provided with n cum: owning) Ins a amt}? tyo! oboutmwsoOpuoemm-t Stunner and Huge m cluttered for May 24th Th9 Stunner and Me an Med for my 24th by the C.L.A. {or m excursion to Sturgeon Point and knelon F3111. Several Other excursions have already been booked. Write early (or terms and EXCURSIONS Commencing THURSDAY. MAY nth. will run on the following time-table until {ur- thcx notice : ‘ Leave COBOCONK ................ 6.40 gm. " PENELON FALLS............S.45 “ " STL'BGEON POINT.........9.15 “ Arrive LINDSAY (new wharf). . . ..10.30 “ Lave LINDSAY .................. 3.00 pm. Arriye STURGEON P018112... . ...4 15 “ “ FENELON FALLS... ...... 4.45 “ “ COBOCONK ................ 6.30 “ “ MAPLE LEAF ” Coboconk to Linduy .......... Coboeouk to Penelon F3113. . . Roads]: to Fenelon Falls ....... Foneboa Fall! to Sturgeon Point. Penelon Fan to Linduy ........ Steamer wit! cm at- anyltuding when dzna'n‘f Freight sud psroel: curried 1: low nus. Fn-onble terms {at small «excursion panics to my pain: en route. For (armor intonation tpply to THE ‘W Trent Valley Navigation Go. Commencing on MONDAY. MAY 152, :899, the Steamer «11] run as follows :â€" Letvr. Bobuygeon It ....... Arrive b$ .induy u. ....... â€"â€"PLY1NG BETWEENâ€" Bobcaygeou, Lindsay and Stur- geon Point Lindsay-Coboconk Route. THE FAST STEAMER GRAIN CAR RY! NG.-â€"Atmzements an be made wuh we L‘yum (or calling a my point. on the Lake (or gnin. J. W. DIAMENT, Cap‘. Laure Lindnv u. ..... .. 8.00 arrive in Bobcaygeon at .......... 6. 30 Sturgeon Point, Single Fare. 350. ‘I ‘I Return Bobcaygeon, Single STEAMER “NORTH KING” Leave Port IIope.........: ...... 2.30 pm. “ Cbbourg ................. 1.25 “ Arrive Charlotte ..... . ............ 7. t 5' " “ Rochester (N.Y.C.) ......... 7.45 “ . , NORTH Bouxn. ~ Leftve Boctxeste: (N.Y.C.) . . . . . . . ..8.20 mm. Leave Rocheszex (N.Y.C.) ........ .8.20 3.: , “ Charlene ................... 8.50 “ Arrive Cobourg .................. 1.20 pm “ Port Hope ................. 2.05 “‘ Right ream-Veda: change fine without notice cm “"1053. Agent. Lindsay H. H. GILDERSLEEVE, Cobourg, Port Hope and Rochester, N .Y. ESTURION L. 0.. 3. OF Q. STEAMBPAT 60-, (Limited SEASON OF 1899. Next Door to Simpson House. Kat-Sn, Lindsay. You may enjoy this popular form of entertainment, in a quiet way, every day in the year, if you order some of the exquisite patterns of Wall Paper we are showmg. TAKING EFFECT lst OF MAY win carry a limited number of Q‘ SCHEDULE OF FARES= CAPT. J. D. VARCOE. OWIER, LINDSAY 9.0 J. M. KNOWLSON. LINDSAY THVIE TABLE THE STEAMER (LIMITED) SOUTH BOUND RETURNING WILL Return Manager Kingston. ! plate *CALICE- ETHEL Sinde Return 70:: 8‘. 00 I‘ 10. 30 2 3O p.m. l 25 “ 7.x; " 7-45 “ = 8.50 u 1.20 le 500. 75c. $1.00 [ember Boys! Baum for Good Dentistry,_3‘. DR SUTTOS' mmsr v (10915de oldentimry do“. ”gigantic manner at moi “1" due out lots-m1 Drug store.-17‘ W! Honor 9mm 0! To Oollegeolbonnl Surgeons. YJduO Uni DR E. A. TOTTE um :31, i Y DENTIST. - . UNDsa Inna-teeth without pain by cum Whyflnlormyunmm HeWthoguundoer-Imm‘d‘: theoflgimdgutor emtngmm mm. New thnbe bu ‘i'a'h 180.417mwitboutu: W ”Li use-them toe-1 pain otmm B“ wmmamodemm P. .mme coming. 0mm M! www.mduy. ' -71 DR. NEELANDS DR. ARTHUR DAY ‘ DEIJ'TIST successes to m: um n lumber (1 Toronto Dental Coliege .4 Univality. Also graduate d Amen: loot linden Dentistry practised '2 Idenfific met. Own an! Brilgo Work 1 Speak“; U tad “deuce north-ens: a Dumbddge-m. Telephone :1. Gndnste of Toronto ‘Un‘ U to Gaol Lad Surgeon to GILL; District. office hours 10 1012 am: Sun gum. Residence 33 Weliingwa m. I o. (3. y of Toronto Unixersitu Medan; Eu unto of Trinity Lniversity.1‘crcnmu of C liege o! Physidmg sad Sum Ofiee South-«st corner miss; sud Li Telephone 101â€"23 15'. DR WHITE, GRADCAT of Toronto L‘nhersizc Meir/131a i ST} R. A. GILLES PIE, Ci 80. 06am! undue-ac Owned and flagellum [jean-me a! 22;“ Physician and Eugen“, Edinburgh in Midwifery. filinburxh Spa-1mm demtay and diseases of women Sting 93.-â€"35. Bax-deems, Nvfar Bank. Kent-51., 1.13135: lowest rates. {KENNY ‘R 3 QT? t u om and residence. Rusk-+1. Li! and door was: of York-St. 05cc boas. 9.1 10.30;.1114130 pun. w 3 p.m.. sad? :5: J. SIMPSON, gndusze cf Uni“. of T; Toronto Media! Conege 0: indm nu Ont. ha of Bochrood Asylum. King!“ Trunk Sermon. Lindsay I’m-via. Lad- sry. 4th. 1891.. DR. SIMPSON, PHYS} Manama “(lav-an 1‘," ~ _ "< Loan gt Lowest Rues. Odin: 50 south. 0. E. BOPKXXS. “0 Solicitor, etc Clerk 0! the Fake. 3-: Block. foot 0! Ken: Sf": CS\VEY \ i; Hurricm n: S ..:.2 ;'~3 J OHN MCSWEYN RlSTEBS, SQle‘l'mr Hamilton's Blk";i. Kent-8'... L: 1'0 LOAN 1: very Lewes: 1W I. J.~KKNXY. Mundane Bank 0: 3lonrn'u- â€" on W :t lowast carton: N “Him-st... mods-3‘. . .... "‘ KID, Barriste‘s sad renews: Far-s. L‘v Kent4z. We :n- luau; . «tonnage m sum lxrgcc‘ on the best b-rn-fi am“ uncut. Wtdt‘u-r Maui R. J. HeLAL'iLi JN l} ’OCkWOd r-“w " other an)” promptly 3' emu. Sales can be 8?- m once. We have . 31739 a” ‘3 stave pa ecu... ~13 #01:; Propem. .owiz b0!“W 3109R? nun lucLAUG GHL1\ s\ X; um Ramszes 5‘63"“ En coudnc! e1: THOMAS S tinncer. C599 0 PETER .y opmme m: D‘ V (/1 '1‘. ST EWART. F. D. HOOKS. TEWART 5c . A. E. VROOMAN-J MONEY TO LO‘ tifincer. Solicitor for the Ozark P. DEVLIN. BARRIfi JEFFERS flarriei jaunt.) filttjsicians ,x WV“ (IC- owesâ€"94 m: BROWN. \ K'ELD Vettin- ”Md!” a 0L3 V. F. M. 15 finest g decic' ant Tai wilQ GUI Ie'eila “Y .‘na

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