Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman (1888), 11 Aug 1892, p. 2

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31 Ynu can get sinnels to the house of prayer if ynu plm for It. Take one de- nominationâ€"the Methodxstsâ€"the saddle and Scripture and sermon were almost nsoparable parts of the foundation of the a. chance? to éonvert souls in§tead cf benches and chalrs. Thousands of folk will go to meeting on wheels who won't go on legs. Let us get them there: Farmers, give the bays a bit of rest on Saturday, and then Sunday morning out with the spring wagon and four seats, and you can give the preacher Cm: with the wagons, harness the horses to the carriages, and let me have them for use in the King’e service. on Sabbath morning I arose to tell ééint and sinner alike, “Thisis not our abiding- place." Preacher 3 your next sermon may be the last to some soul. He who holds the keys of life and death has spoken to me in a loud voice of late. I cannot hold back the truth of immediate surrender on the part of every sinner to the claims of Almighty God and the ac- ceptance of his Son, Jesus Christ, as Sa- viour. At our opening services this winter, I closed the Sabbath night meeting at 9 o’clock, and at 9.20, one who sat in the pew was dead. I January, while at St. James, Harlem, one Sunday, there gathered with the throng a woman Whose ball dress was complete for the gay affair Tuesday night next; she went not. for Thursday they buried her in the same gown; and still another of that same con- gregation slept beneath the sod when again If I were in a boat on the river in the rapids, it would not be necessary to insure my destruction that I should enter into lent controversy with those who would urge me from the shore to take heed and come to land. says Rev. Dr. Bates. All I should have to do would be to shut my ears to their entreaty, and leave myseif alone ; the current would do the rest. Neglect of the Gospel is thus just as peril- ious as the Open rejection of it. Indeed half the evils of our daily life in temporal things are caused by neglect, and count- less are the souls to put off the sleeking of the kingdom of God, and the righteous- ness thereof. There is a time, we know not. when, A point. we know not where, That marks the destiny of men, For glory or despair. I would have you stop in your reading now for a full five minutes, quietlyâ€"if that be possibleâ€"meditate on this fact, that may be this day some one will reach that point, walking side by side with you, and 9. word of Gospel from ycu, aptly given, may give them glory and not despair. Look at. the roses saluting each other, Looks at the herds all at peace on the plainâ€" Man and man only makes war on his bro- ther, And laughs in his heart at his peril and Pain; Shamed by the beasts that go down on the plain. Is it worth while that we battle to humble Some poor-fellow soldier down into the dust ‘3 God pity us all ! Time eft soon will tumble All of us together like leaves in a. gust, Humbled indeed down into the dust. Is it worth while that we jostle a brother Bearing, his loud on the rough road of life ? 7 Is it worth while that we jeer at each "other In the blackness of heart? that we war to the knife? God pity us all in our pitiful stmfe. God pity us all as we jostle each other ; God pardon us all for the triumph we feel When a fellow goes down ’neath his load on the heather Pierced to the heart ; words are keener, than steel, 1 And mightier far for woe or for weal. \ Were it not well, in this brief little jour- ney On over the isthmus, down into the tide, We give him a 11in instead of a serpent, Ere folding the hands to be and abide Forever and aye in the dust by his side. au\>v.y‘.un aw.-‘_ _w~5,V, 2303 St. Catherine Street, Montreal. They give free services to all who call upon them before August lst, 1892. and frankly tell you if your case is curable or not. All incurable cases are rejected. Special attentlon is haid to every case. Invalids living outside of Montreal should address their letters to MR. JOHN MURRAY, ll’Iannger, and enclose two 3 cent stamps for symptom blank and ques- tion sheets. A staff of eminent American PhysiCians and Surgeons have opened an office for medical and surgical attendance, a: No. THE AMERICAN DOCTORS (29 Yearspractzke in Earofie andAmrica.) Slighting the Gospel Invitation. Ebe “Watchman. THURSDAY. AUG. 11, 1892. Preachers Take Warning; DOWN INTO THE DUST. . SUNDAY READING. Sunday Travelling. Mark This, THEIR SERVICES ARE FREE. J OARUIN MILLER. “(fur fishing line was of formidable size It was made of rope thSted with wires of “He was in the Great Eastern last year, and saw the cable when it broke; and he and Capt. Anderson at once took their ob- servations so exact that thev could go to the spot. After finding it. they marked the line of the cable by a row of buoys, for fogs would come down and shut out sun and stars, so that no man could take an observation. These buoys were anchor- ed a few miles apart. They were number- ed, and each had a flagstafl' on it, so that it could be seen by day, and a lantern by night. Thus having taken out bearings, we stood off three or four miles, so as to come broadside on, and then, casting over the grapnel, drifted slowly down'upon it, dragging the bottom of the ocean as we went. At first it was a little awkward to fish in such deep water, but our men got used to it, and soon could cast a grapnel almost as straight as an old‘whaler throws aharpoon. _ After landing the cable safely at New- foundland, we had another taskâ€"tn return to mid-ocean and recover that lost in the expedition last year. This achievement has, perhaps, excited more surprise than the other. It was the triumph of the high- est nautical and engineering skill. We had four ships and on board of them some of the best seamen in Englandâ€"men who knew the ocean as a hunter knows every trail in the forest. There was Captain Moriarity, who was in the Agamemnon in 1857-8. How the Cable Lost at Sea was Recover- ed in Mid-Ocean. At a dinner given to Mr. Field by the New York Chamber of Commerce, Nov. 5, 1866. he told about the recovery of the cable which was lost in the ocean’s bed, in these words, says the New York Times : A strange and shocking transaction came to light in a court in Massachusetts a few days ago. It appears that a hotel keeper near Springfield, in February last engaged a woman as an employee in the hotel. She told him that she was married, but as her husband had experienced financial reverses, she was obliged to support her- self until he could recover his position. She was extremely pretty and bright and industrious and the hotel keeper was pleased with her help. In May, a young man came to board in the house who paid her marked attention. The woman re- pulsed his advances and avoided the repeated efforts he made to hold private conversation with her. His manner became so persistent that she finally com- plained to her employer who expostulated with the boarder. To his amazement the boarder declared that the woman was his wife. This she indignantly denied and the man being threatened with arrest disclosed the whole transaction. He sxid that. the woman’s first husband was a spendthrift, an idle. worthless fellc w who could not or i would not support himself, and had ne- . glected and ill-used his wife from the 3 beginning of their married life. He had 1 offered to sell his wife finally, and this man had bought her. He had given a hundred and fifty dollars in cash and a note for five hundred, and he procured a regular bill of sale like those used in the sale of horses. duly signed and witnessed. He considered the transaction perfectly valid and consi- dered himself aggrieved by the woman’s refusal to listen to his explanation. He was finally arrested and told his story in court. The judge was shocked at his de- pravity and still more by that of the bus- band, as every one must be who reads the story. Unhappily, we are only too fami- liar with parellel cases. When the Chris- tian man involuntarily engages in wicked business transactions for the sake of gain, and sells his Lord whose he has promised to be. (Heb. 12 : 16, 17.) Many a day my head aches, my heart beats, my blood "tinges. my face burns with the hot flush of shame that individu- als, societies, churches, once alive to the work of giving souls eternal life by the cross. have fallen to the loaves and fishes for mind and body which perish with the giving. may get at them with that most blessed of all things, salvation. and once they get that and the desert of their lives will blossom as the rose. ' I like kind acts. merciful doings, bright smiles, liberal gifts, but no one or all of these “ ere ever intended by our Lord to lift the fallen out of their terrible condi- tions. They are only means whereby we How then can they be helped? I answer : change their characters and their conditions will change immediately. Get a man converted by the power of the Holy Ghost, and then and there he has God in him as well as God with him to help carry heavy loads pp high hill_s_ IUGU "ULn UA- vv vv-VJ .â€".... n..-_ , ers, and if preachers ean us the noble beast that they may preach, why not lay- men use the same that people may hear. That mighty trumpet call of God‘ in the last chapter of the bible. verse seventeen, has in it these words: “Let him that heareth say come.” Not pray come, but “say come," and wheels and driver and team will be no small addition to your in- vitation. Try it. Strange CharacterruStrange Conditions. r---'vl‘vh.i‘s-wiseâ€"1‘37rand filth and sin troubles you. If it would reallyhelpthem,you would part with much of your substance, but this you doubt, seriously doubt, and well you may. Take the submerged classesâ€"pick out a. round thousand of‘them, and to each give a thousand dollars, and this alone will send them, as a class, nearer the pit of perdition than they have ever beenâ€" neither individuals nor classes can be re- deemed from sin nor its results by gold or silver. Christian reader, give me your closest attention now. You are one of the many who want to help the lower classes up in the scale of life. What shall you do, and how shall it be done, are the perplexing problems for you to solve. - nI.I 1 Ed 1.---.-LI..- MR_ FIELD’S OWN STORY. A Wife Sold. THE WATCHMAN. LINDSAY; THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, I892 An aged and much respected resident nf East Nibsouri tuwnship, named Bartin- dale, was thrown from a. load of hay Monday by_the team suddenly starting and killed. scared to tell what ailed her. He soon found out, for on going in he at first thought he had “had ’em again," for the room seemed full of snakes. \Varmed by the genial glow of the kitchen fire the snakes had come to life and were coursing round the room with soul-chilling energy. He did not care to tackle thejob of killing them there, so he pushed the outer door open and they soon found their way out, and had not gone 100 yards before they were stili as ever with the cold. He fol- lowed them out and finished them with a pole, but says he will never trust a snake again, no matter how hard frozenâ€"Globe Democrat. The tenacity of life possessed by snakes 3 is very wonderful. Last winter some men were digging a well out in the country and close to the Meramec, when they came on a cavity in. the around which contained a nest of snakes. The weather Was bitter cold, and the snakes were apparently dead. They were all black snakes and harmless, so the men loaded them into the bucket and sent them to the top, just for a curiosity. They were thrown out on the ground, and in a. little while were frozen as stiff as so many sticks, Their bodies became so brittle with the frost that in handling them several were broken like icicles. One of the men when he went home at night took two or three of the largest along to frighten his wife. He succeeded very well, and, leaving the snakes on the floor in the kitchen before the tire, sat down to eat his supper, for-‘ erecting,Ir all about them. While the meal, was in progress his wife. who had left the room, suddenly gave a terrific scream that made him jump up in a panic and run to see what Was the matter. As he opened the kitchen door she fell against him, almost fainting with fright and too badly “I have seen my companions. one and another, falling by my side, and I feared that I, too. might not live to see the end. And yet one hope has led me on, and I have prayed that 1 might not taste of death till this work was accomplished. That prayer is answered, and now, be- yond all acknowledgements to men is the felling of gratitude to Almighty God.” “It has been a long, hard struggle, nearly thirteen years of anxious watching and ceaseless toil. Often my heart has been ready to sink. Many times when wandering in the forests of Newfoundland in the pelting rains or on the decks of ships, on dark nights-alone, far from homeâ€"I have almost accused myself of madness and fully to sacrifice the peace of my family and all the hopes of my life for what might prove after all but a dream. “This wâ€"as like a whisper of God from the sea, blddiug me keep heart and hope. The Great Eastern bore herself proudly through the storm as if she knew the vital cord which was to join the two hemis- pheres hung at her stern.and so on Satur- day, the 7th of September, we brough our second cable safely to the shore-” Afterward, in speakiuu of his greatest work, Mr. Field said: “A few minutes of suspense and a flash told of the lightening current again set free. ‘Then did the feeling long pent up burst forth. Some turned away their heads and wept, others broke into cheers and the cry ran from man to man, and was heard down in the engine rooms, deck below deck, and from the boats on the water, and the other ships, while rockets lighted up the darkness of the sea. A FLASH FROM SHORE. “Then with thankful hearts we turned our faces again to the west. But soon the wind rose, and for thirty-six hours we were exposed to all the dangers of a storm on the Atlantic. Yet, in the very height and fury of the gale, as I sat in the elec- tricians’ room, a flash of light came up from the deep which, having crossed to Ireland. came back to me in mid-ocean, telling that those so dear to me, whom I had left on the banks of the Hudson, were well and following us with their wishes and their prayers. “At length it was brought to the surface. All who were allowed to approach crowded forward to see It. Yet not a word was spoken; only the vioces of the ofiiCers in command were heard giving orders. All felt as if life and death hung“r on the issue. It was only when it was brought over the bow and on the deck that men dared to breathe. Even then they hardly believed their eyes. Some crept toward it to feel of it, to be sure it was there. Then we carried it: along to the electricians’ room to see if ourlong-sought treasure was alive or dead. steel, so as to bear a-strain of thirty owns. It took about two limits for the gravg'nel to reach bottom but we could tell When it struck, I often went to the b0 W and sat on the rope, and could feel by the qui\ er that the gmpnel Was (li‘?‘E-:9‘Au' on the hotâ€" tum two miles under Us.~ But it “as a very slow busmessu We had storms and calms and fogs and S’qualls. ANXI’.)US DAYS. “Still we worked on day after day. Once‘ on the 7th day of August, we got the cable up and had it in sight for five minutesâ€"u long, slimy monster, fresh from the ooze of the ocean’s bed; but our men begun to cheer so wildlv that it seemed to be frightened, end suddenly broke away and went down mto the sea. When finally it appeared it was nndnirrht: the lirrhtsof the ship and in the boats around our bows, as they flashed in the faces of the men, showed them eagerly watching for the cable to appear oh the water. This accident kept us at. work two weeks longer; but, finally, on the last night of August. we caught it. We had cast the grapnel thirty times. It wasa little befnre midnight on Friday night that we hooked the cable. and it was a little after midnight Sunday morning when we got it on board, What was the anxiety of those twenty-six hours! The strain on every man’s life was like the strain on the cable itself. A Snake's Grip on Life .. - yua- .axulau ullu uaul' bridge sts. Open daily from 9.00 A. M. to 10.00 P. M. Prayer Praise meeting Saturday at 8 P. M. Young men’s meeting Sunday at 4.15 P. M. Short addresses. Good singin . Youn men always welcome. Dr. V. H. Carke, President; C. K. Calhoun Gen. Secre~ tarv. SALVATION ARMY, Peel street.â€"-Ca tain Moore and Lieut. Parkin, o cers. Sunday services at 7 and 11 A.M._. and 3 and 7.30 P.M. Public meeting with the exception of Tuesday, soldiers roll call; and Friday, Holiness meeting to which all Christians are welcome. ST. ST. BAPTIST, Cambridge Streetâ€"Rev. W. K. Anderson Pastor. Services at 11.00 A. M. and 7.00 P. M. Prayer Meeting Sabo ath morning at 10.30 A. M. Sabbath School at 2.30 P. M. Young People‘s Society of Christian Endeavor Monday at 7.30 P. M. Prayer Meeting Wednes- day at 7.30 P. M.â€"A11 seats free. METHODIST, Cambridge St.â€"Rev. T. M, Campbell. Pastor. Services at 11 A.M.. and 7.00 P. M. Sabbath School and Bible Class at 2.30. Classes at 10 A.M. Prayer Meeting, \Vednesday at 8 P. M. Young People's Christian Endeavor Society. every Friday ev aninq at 7.30. METHODIST, Queen Street.â€"Rev. Newton Hill, Pastor. Services at 11.00 A. M. ‘3'“‘17'003' M. Sabbath School at 2.30 year. A committee appointed by the Chamber of Commerce of Grand Forks, Dak.,bas issued a call for a conference to consider reciprocity with Canada. The rex enue returns at Toronto 111 J,ul 1892 were upwards of $13, 000m excess of the returns for the same month last The British House of Commons Thurs- day re-elected the Right Hon. Arthur Wellesley Peel as speaker. 7. The man who allows his subscription to run for some time unpaid and then orders the paper discontinued or asks the post-master to mark is “ Refused” leaves himself liable to punishment. 6. If subscribers la) in advance they are bound to give notice at the end of their time if they do not wish to con- tinue takincr the paper, otherwise the publisher may send until such time as a definite order to discontinue. accompanied by payment of all arrears, is sent him. 5. The courts have decided that refusâ€" ing: to take periodicals from the post office, or removing to another town and leaving them uncalled for, prima fecie evidence of intentional fraud. 4. If subscribers move to other places without informing the publisher, and the papers are sent to the old address, they are held liable. 3. If subscribers neglect to take periodi- cals from the post ofiice, they are likewise responsible till all arrearages for subscrip- tions are settled. 2. If subscribers order a paper to be discontinued. the publisher may continue to send it until all arrears of subscriptions are mid. 1. Subscribers wlio do not give definite notice to the contrary are considered as wishing to continue their subscription. 7 The following condensation is based up- on derisions rendered at Various times by Division Court Judges :â€" The principal witness today was Eliza. beth Mastery At the beginning of Octo- her a man accosted her on Ludgate Hill and asked her to take a glass 01 wine. The witness identified Neill as the man, and also identified him as the associate of Ma- tilda Clover. There the matter rested as far as the facts of the death were concerned, but afterward an extraordinary state of things was disclosed‘ At the end of October and in November. when no one knew the truth as to the girl’s death but the man who poisoned her, the prisoner asked Emily Sleaper. atwhose house he lodged, to go around to Lambeth-road to enquire about a girl he knew who he thought had been poisoned, and on Nov 28 he wrote a black- mailing letter to Dr. Broadbent, in which he definitely stated that Matilda Clover died through being: poisoned by strychnine. He was thus giving information which could only be known by the man respon- sible for her death. In May the body was exhumed, and Dr. Stevenson found that death had occurred through a fatal dose of strychnine.‘ On that day he was seen by two women making the acquaintance of Matilda Glover and he was seen to enter her house after her. Masters and May waited to see if he would come out, but he did not, and he did not return to his lodgings that night. October 9. On October 20, Lucy Rose, the servant mrl at Clover’s lodgings, saw Clover enter with a man, whom she described as tall, broad, about 40, with a heavy mustache and wearing a silk hat. That night Clover died in great agony, after stating that a man had given her some “pills.” As the Man Who Entered the House of Matilda Clover. LONDON, Aug. 4,â€"Thomas Neil Cream, the alleged poisoner, was brought ug yes- terday on remand at the Bow-street .olice Court char ed with the murder of Matilda Clover on ct. 21 at 27 Lambeth-road. The evidence showed that a day or two before the prisoner went to Lambeth-road he made the acquaintance in Fleet-street of Elizabeth May and Elizabeth Masters and Slat 3e arranged to meet one of them on ct. . M. 'Young PcofipchWZi‘h‘REt’ia‘hv Bigfcie Sabbath Morning at 10.15 PAUL’S (Church of England) Rusqell Streetâ€"Rev. C. H. Marsh, Rector. Ser- vices at 11.00 A. M. and 7.00 P. M- Sabbath School at 2.30. Prayer Meet~ ine; Wednesday at 7.30 P. M. MARY‘S (Roman Catholic) Russel Street 13_Â¥ ‘y- I‘ .............. , -uuuuul uul CCU â€"Rev. Vicar-General Laurent, Pastor, Rev. Father, McCaui, Curate. Services at 8.00 and 10.30 A. M. and 7.00 P. M. Sabbath School at; 3.30 P. M. M. C. A., Rooms Cor. Kent and Cam- bridge sts. Open daily from 9.00 A. M. to 10.00 P. M. Prayer Praise meeting Saturday at ‘ P. 'M. __Young men’s mnnfi:n~ 0--“ J , ANDREW’S (Presbyterian). William Street. Rev. Robert; Johnston, B. A., Pastor. Services at 11.00 A.M. and 7.00 P. M. Sabbath School at 3.00 P. M. Prayer Meeflng ‘Vflfedllgsglay at 8.00 P. ‘- ‘7-.-" P. M. Praver Meetmg Thursday at 7 .30 P. M. The prisoner was remanded until Friday The Churches. NEWSPAPER LAW NEILL IDENTIFIEU NEWS ITEMS. i 131:: and 18:7 This firm enjoys the highest reputation in Canada for their {6152' bility, cheapness,‘excellence of design and workmanship ; and at 2'2: request and expense of the Canadian Governmeut Messrs. Owen 3i; Garvey 8: Son forwarded a large exhibit to the Antwerp exposing 1886, for which they have received two bronze medals and diploma and a silver medal for their upholstery exhibit, part of which was ct original design. This exhibit was afterwards placed in the Coloria" and Indian exhibition, London, England, still at the Government ex- pense. One result of this was that the firm received a commemorative medal and diploma for their very large and fine dispiay of furniture Speaking of this display, the critic of the London Cabinet Maker 335 Art Finisher (Nov Ist, 1886,) which is the highest authority in Englazé in this line of business, says: “ The Empire may well be proud of :11: fine Canadian exhit, but unfortunately the furniture of these 137:; colonists is too much affected by the American style to command :3: admiration of the artistic. It is, however, fair to say that in many case the goods which are shown are free from such blemishes. notabh: the: exhibited by Messrs, Owen McGarvey Son, of Montreal. '1‘ fie chef and table here figured (referring to illustrations of these articles“ 2:3 unique selection from the exhibit of this firm, and the designs will spcai for themselves.” They have been awarded medals, diplomas and otha' distinctive recognitions from the Paris, Belgian, and late Indian and Colonial exhibitions, as well as from all the Dominion exhibitions. “'th they have exhibited. As manufacturers and dealers in furniture. thf’F have placed upon the market some of the finest drawing room. p350? dining and library suites, as well as‘the finer grades of \thlI'uom fun?- ture, in which line they make a specialty, It is well known that Mcfia“ vey has never resorted to any exaggerated advertising, cnlpiovcd at? outside salesman. Or canvassing agents. His numerons customers has? always received the respectful attention to the requirements of ail riff? ing his establishment. Heinherits all the: well known proverbial swig-rt- fo’rward qualities of a North of Ireland business man studiOUsEr zu-oidmé any publicity as a prominct citizen of Montreal. and declining mail honors which he had been requested to accept. \Vhat he does as philat‘: thropist is done quietly and unostenstatiouslv. and whilst attending strictly to his own business has not neglected to identify himself iii}?- any worty object or institution. He has ibeen for many \‘t‘ars 3 iii;- governor of the Montreal General Hospital a life-gox-ei-niu- and \‘I'CCZ president of the Notre Dame Hospital, a director and ViCC-In'gslticm 9: the Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Montreal, :1 tlirecti‘i' of 3} Pa“ C‘s Orphan Asylum, a member both of the Board 'ri-adc emf ArtA s ocration, and Vice-president of St. Patrick's 'l‘emperzmrnSome?) for my years, being well known as a staunch teetotallar an? «'m cat? est advocated the temperance cause during the last 40 \‘cars. T35 firmly CStathhFd reputation Offlfis well known house is a sufficient 53.1%? antee that outsrde Show 15 only the last thing aimed at, and that stablhi‘. good value for money are to be found i " “shed firm 0: n t e old estabn- Cfilinlwmdows (the largest 1n the WOrld), as well as large bav windo; V o be found in thi esecond floor, Will be worthy of special notice as they cor“ ‘ malty New styles of .Parlor.and Drawing Room F urniture. all theirhokrr. ma e, the Upholstermg bemg the very best in every res ect d f :~'-. ed durmg the past few weeks. ' p ,an mâ€" orkmanship in t uently will not L This popular house has been actively engaged in the manufacture1 of furniture since 1843, in which year Mr. Owen McGarvey establishs‘ himself in business, laying the foundation of what is now known ascz; of the finest furniture houses in the Dominion. Whilst so many 01h“ firms in this line have been less fortunate, success has followed him 1; all his operations. The premises occupied comprise a large six storer building, 60xIOO feet, which is largely used for show rooms. The entire? establishment is a model one, neatness and order prevailing et‘en'irhere all available space being taken up to accommodate the enormous stock which they carry and from which purchasers can select to adrantag as their stock is classified, each department is complete in itself. The passenger elevator is constantly in operation, and will be found not or; a great conveniece, but a positive luxury in its way to convey their at tomers to the various flats of this mammoth establishment. Two l2:E Show windows (the largest in the w0rld), as well as large bay windm PLAIN 85 FANCY FURNITURE. OWEN MCGARVEY Son. 1849-1853 N otre Dame Street. ‘ MONTREAL- l The Government Reports for years past show that the zETNA LIFE has paid to living policy holders IN CANADA 3 lar ger sum in settlement of’MATURED ENDOWMENTS than that paid by Canaâ€" dian and British Companies combined. No better evidence is required of the value and popularity of the zETNA EN- DOWMENT Policies. Casi: Dividends paid Every year JOHN D. MAOMURCHY General Agent ASSETS, ' ' ' $37,397 238 SURPLUS, (by Canadian Standard) 7,858,507 INCOME, - - - - 6,243,780 DEPOSIT AT OTTAWA, - 3,000,000 POLICIES IN r000: - l24,907,2l7 NEW POLICIES, I890 - 23,370,242 Dealer in Fresh and Salt Meats. Orders delivered to any part of the tow THE ETNA Owe” McGamey €75 50%. I P. TULLY, Life Assurance Company. Wholesale and Retail Manufacturers of and Dealers in ENIEOWNMENTS 5? Not? Dame Street, cornerbf McF-‘ll street. â€"gth door east 01 the market. Wheat, Peas, Barley: Oats, Red and Alsike Glover and Potato McDonnell Cow TO FARMERS Are now prepared to buy at the new G. T. R, Storehouse, Lindsay. REPAIRIN FARM W which cannot be 1 be above will be _rticle and prices LO’CONNOR EW 0A Lindsa; , A iriages,

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