Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman Warder (1899), 15 Mar 1900, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

‘TH, .13: .. beg to thank 0mm; v-:., S' hem that no efl'on I3 M“ " 5 in evexy depamunt, T G is for cash. makes!!! . - koods ycu want a! i , 0mg; ENDSAY. 01"“ ’TICIANS rm . After stock." t off until »f it the full he place ftes of interest. b Piano; 'd ortans ms and 0'81”! Rotary sum sandBoys’,every cared off at frou cent. discount .vy Ribbed Wad, :11 find the Pfi‘” Ishor :Bwne, ‘ a of above 2% 0f ViCtOfia. 110 a y cceived one thi is still on hand list that should '0!) want ca: in exchange. a, withdrawal it ‘3" rf sxco and “13"“ English Prim; A KWOOI satisfacnon. ER) N 011106“ l to Finfomation 3P3!" WILL MAKE You so have felt the great 0‘ good health you will ‘mhou‘ TINY TABLETS. County Company, because Company that insures Farm Schools and Churches and t O {7' 60“?an the other Compames do a ket policy 15 is<ued on contents of 13-” Bewam of the specxfic Insurance mugs. r Companies where the amounts , contents. [ded 9n table and see how the rJtmfina Dec.., 1395.. 1)qu 1397.. 857,060.... 25,039 67 808.1,191,125..-.. 36,110 11 Dec, 1 , Dec. 1899..I,615,095.... 473468 04 3150 Agent for good English and Amer. Dmpanies for Insurance on Town and :0 ext . pâ€" p Afiynn annlv t0 ééd on contema. table and see how the at the follo wing g in the confidence of lhe Manitoba. and Canadian North-Wat bate Toronto every TUESDAY during hand ApriL Bangers travellmg without Live Stock drake the train leaving Toronto at 2 p.111. sengers travellirg with Live Stock should hetxain Ieavmg Toronto at 9 p m. [onist Sleeper will be attached to each EVERYBODY’S FRIEND TEH THAN A TRIP TO EUROPE “waists. By mail from '9’ Molicina Co’y, Limited, Toronto 50c. PER meme: T11£ m$5a A159“: Man. It may be worth a like gum or even more to you.. ... ‘1-72131. Barres (73., N. 13., Much l9, 13" 2 use»: your Kendxll'ISpuvir Cure mt! at. l have cared I 59.”. on my M read I :1 take 31:23 for her, Which I offered for .75 J! In} be pieavd to have your book all! "Clip" 1" *mfled scams. ul rad 0:: the cm!!- TEZV Mars. FRANK SMITH- UIIOOOICOJIIOOCOO 7““ "um": IDLACUIU .ywv-i â€"vâ€" 7'. ““0"“ “HEW-mete. Removes the bunch And 0 ‘3? 5c"?- Price, $1; I]: for .5. A8 a. liniment “myy use it has no equal. Ask your dmggiu 3’92“?“ 5m“ cum. also “A Wino-tho full particulars and copy of “Settlers’ apply to any Canadian yPacific Agent, Hngto- :. Kendall CA, 3’ P' 0., 0mm, Mnâ€" 6. ’38- ! Sinzâ€"Encloqed please find Swot!” Ki“ 21.9mm Mk. 1 had one butitislod. l unset! Wall's $pav'm Pure without on. [film It “I", ‘l‘ ids-k me but Lin linen! {or an "be.“ In .30 “Ct- Ilnd me the rm; 2.: you :dv m b. it an bottle, for hot... GEORGE BROWN. ifp‘abgommly reliable remedy_ to; 8’8th ,,,_L - :0'0‘30001'“. 009 ““‘W0005'C‘U: 5" the h E MEHEUHY’S DIP 8.1. KENDALL co., ENOSBURG FALLS. VT- 3 Moon.””00.000000000000393“ T. G. Matchett, Agent Reminds us of the ap- Proacn of cold wpather. We think of puttmg up Stoves, and buying new ones, Woods can meet you in both. He has a full” line of Coal Stoves, Wood Stoves and Ranges. The finest goods in the market. A. H. NOTMAN, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agent: Also all the utensils ESCd with stoves :Kettles, Frying Pans and Boilers; $1150 Wringers and Wash- mg Machines.- Come and ’ KENDKLL‘S? SPAVIN CURE ILWDODS >ok free, or addreu KENT STREET. my stock. TH, 190° - KEHT' STREET Kggnt, Lindsay ASSETS ..$ 6,511 47 .. 14.698 64 .. 25.019 67 . 36,110 11 TorontO. bless- never THE BIRDS AND PLANTS THE BIRDS â€" THEIR SCIENTIFIC ’ABS- THETIC AND ECONOMIC VALUE â€" EVOLUTIONâ€"THE INSECT SCOURGE â€"WHAT BIRDS DO AGAINST ITâ€" THE VALUE OF DIFFERENT SORTS â€"THB SPARROW NUISANCE. On Thursday night the Horticultural Society ‘held its adjourned annual meet- ing. The council chamber was provided with extra seats, beautlfied with plants and flowers and crowded with people. A delightful evening was spent. After several selections on the gramaphone under the management of Mr. W. Web- ster, President Robson read a short address eulogizing the society’s work. He then asked Mr. Burrell of St. Catharines to speak on “Birds in Relation to Horti- culture.” Those who had heard Mr. Burrell last spring had high expectations of a treat and were in no wise disap« pointed. follows : Birds are or great importance to thisi country because of their relation to insect pests and from these our fruits are never free. But the birds are valued by us also because of their beauty and song. What a different country this would be if the melody of our feathered songsters was hushed on hill and dale i We do not see and listen as we ought to the splendor and charm of nature. Even in our ad- vanced civilization the rush and struggle of life' rivet our attention to commercial aims and exclude the rare beauties that challenge the serses on every side. When ‘ most people are not in the oflice or eating ‘and drinking they are not wholly awake. The great world is largely a blank. Isaac Walton spoke the truth when he said many people are too busy to laugh. A Capital Lecture by Mr. M Burrell of St. Catharines. The beauties of natu’re do appeal strongly to two classes. They are children and poets. In youth we are alive to the color and smell and Bound and mystery of the great things of nature about us. The child is very close to unsnllied creation. But under the grind and wear oflife’s struggle the eyes turn away from the beautiful and the ears grow deaf to the music of the world. Gradually life be- comes closed and hard, until the senses fall and the body falls. Poets and peOple ‘of the poetic temperament do not loose the sensitiveness of childhood. They do not get away from nature. Poets like Wordsworth, Shakespeare, Lowell and Tennyson show us how even to old age men may retain the most tender relation to the things in nature. It was this that made Wordsworth say : “Thanks to the human heart by which we live, Thanks to its tenderness, its joys, its fears To me the meanest flower that blows, can give Thoughts that do often lie too deep for We should all cultivate as much as we can that simplicity and responsiveness to nature that children and posts possess. THKEE ELEMENTS In men there are three elements. (I) The child, (2) the poet, (3) the primitive hunter. When a man sees s flock oi wild geese coming north in the spring his first thought. is a regret: that he had no gun with which to shoot at them; but with most of us it is likely that as in the falling shadows of the spring evening, we listen to the harsh cackle and hear high above our heads the wide rush and the whirr of wings that die away in the dis- tant dimness. there are other thoughts than of killing. They effect us strangely :and we feel subdued and. pensive. A touch of the wild and free in nature has reached us. Ernest Seaton Thompson in the splendid book “Wild Animals that I Have Known,” says that after awhile the noblest hunter will be he that goes forth, not with a gun to kill, but with III, IV. was, â€"v' 7 camera and? field glass to study the life that in about him. ABOUT SOME BIRDS Poets sing chiefly of the ekylark and nightingale. and those of us who have sing early in the morning and our Cen- edim men don’t care to get up in time to hear them. It is worth while though to gget up at ,dey break, or even before, to iheer the richivk'melody of the brown thrush. the pldntive stain- of the peeweet, the carol of the robin and the jolly rollicking measure: of the hobo- link. The research of scientists like Huxley and Darwin have shown us how the animals and birds of to-dsy have come to be what they are. From the lower forms the strongest have survived and propagat- ed their kind till we have the various species of the present time. Claws, Win28 and beak have developed according to conditions and needs. Colors and voices have played their parts. We know that the male birds are the singers as ' hen he spoke of the 1A ‘_ .a-hnA” Bright onuu aye"? u“- ...,- ' singing nightengfila an “ plumage and the WW9" An outline of his address is as belong to the male bird. These are to make them attractive to the females and the envy of other males. “A whistling woman A crowing hen Are neither fit for Gods for men." It is‘noteworthy however that among the human family the females do most of the singing and most of the color busi- ness. (Laughter) And they do it. not so much to attract the men, as to make other women jealous. A man can’t tell what his own wife’s, let alone another man’s wife’s. hat is like, but his wife will come home from church and although she doesn’t know where the text was, she can tell the sort of hat worn by every woman there. By the law of compensation the the birds of sweet voice are usually very homely while those of beautiful plumage cannot sing. The further south you go the brighter the feathers and the worse the voice. ' THE CONFLICT It is useless to look to nature for self- denlai or sacrifice. A great struggle is going on. Bird destroys bird, and ani- mal preys upom animal. There is an endless ferocity that renders the lines “Birds in their little nests agree” not nearly as accurate as “Dogs delight to‘ bark and bite, for ’tis their nature to.”1 Perhaps the nearest approach to unselfish- ness is found in the bee. A bee will give up its life for the hive, but its object is the perpetuation of the species, for when the life of the colony is threatened the bees do not hesitate to kill their own kind. When the honey is low they kill the drones and I have seen them dig the larvae out of the cells and scatter them on the grass. They take the old workers whose wings are frayed and having led them away some distance clip off their 1wings. Only the fittest survive in the animal kingdom. The birds that have strength, beauty or a power of mimicry that aids them. live and propagate their kind; others die (if. It is a fact that an insect wiil not wholly destroy the plant on which it lives. That would mean final starvation. We find that an the plant becomes damaged the insects do get less food and decrease in number so that the plant gets a chance agaln. This Is what in known as the balance of forces. INSECTS A ND BIRDS . Man by artificial conditions produces enormous quantities of certain plants. These provide the insects with food and they thrive. Checks have to be found. Man is helpless himself ; the birds help him. Science has told us what birds help and what do not. The most conclusive proof is the analysis of the contents of a bird’s stomach. With the results of expert testimony of that sort in mind I shall Speak of a few typical birds. THE CROW. No other bird has called forth such voluminous profanity from the farmer as has the crow. He is a provoking rascal too, but not as bad as he gets credit for, and I should be sorry to see him disap- pear irom our winter landscape. He is 1 charged with eating fruit, grain, and the 1 young and eggs of other birds. Well he 1 is guilty, but only in a small degree. A . 1000 stomachs were examined and the : contents were as follows : i “Ahâ€"*hâ€"‘n. Animal food ......... . . 33% Vegetable food ........ 57 ‘7; Mineral ............... 10%, The last-named is scarcely a food but is taken to help digestion, for a crow’s teeth are in his stomachâ€"an arrangement that ‘ seems very convenient to those of us who are troubled with tooth-ache. The crow eats rats, mice, frogs, toads, carrion, and ‘ some eggs, etc., but of his 33% anima1 diet, 24% is insect, so he is a great friend of all plants. He eats grasshoppers, beetles, soldier bugs, weevils, and various larvae. ' He also eats immense quantities of the white grub that injures the straw- berries. He feeds his young with these and as they and he breed in the same season he takes a large supply. 0f the orow’s winter diet 37% is corn, but that of necessity, is picked up around barnyards and the exposed parts of cornfields. In spring and fall corn is only 16% of his food. In the spring he is raising a large family that is nearly all mouth and stomach, and if in his anxiety to stop their howling he stufs them up with a little bit of corn, those of us who have half-a-dtzau hungry boys to feed know |- how to sympathize with him. But a 0 tablespoonfnl of tar on a bushel-of corn and it. These, especially hawks, are given a bad name. As a manner of fact there are many sorts of hawks and only three of them hurt chickens. All hawks are not: hen hawks. About 65% of hawks’ food is mice enzi other rodents, and tube balance is insects. The various sorts of owls des- troy mice too. as well as very large quan- tities of injurious night-flying insects. For every pound of . chicken these birds get, they eat; 30 {ounds of mice and insects. The domestic can eats far more young birds than all the owls and hawks. Some American state had a law passed putting a. bounty on these birds. bun in five or six years it: was so infested with mice and rats than the law was changed in response to an urgent petition. stir it up and the crows won’c touch THE WATCHMAN-WARDER: LINDSAY. ONT. HAWKS AND OWLS. The tame screeoh owl that comes into town sometimes. la a. valuable little bird. In the stomach of one of these owls 50 grasshoppers have been found, in another 17 May beetles. and another 13 cut These are among our handsmmst birds. They do eat fruit, but they do a great deal more good than harm. The food of the first is 18% insects. The robin eats 58% of vegetable, of which a great deal is fruit. but 44% of the fruit is wild varieties. He likes Russian mulberries better than cherries, and some are planting these to save their valuable fruits. The mulberry is no good for anything else. It is like malaria, of which the man said the only good thing about it was that whiskey was a cure for it. (Laughter) Mr. Nash of Toronto told me that he had seen a young robin eat 22 cut worms in half an hour. worms. Swallows, woodpeckers, cuckoos and greyhirde are enemies of all sorts of hurt- i'ui‘ insects life. The greybirds eat the seeds of noxious weeds as well. One of them eats of an ounce a day. Now if there are ten of them to a. square mile and they stay 200 days in the year they will eat 875 tons of seed in an area as large an Ohio. The chickadee is a homely little bird that stays with us all winter and eats the eggs of the canker worm that are deposited on the bark of trees. One has been found with 41 of these in its crop. At that race in would prevent. 138.000 eggs from batching. These birds should not be called Eog- lish but European sparrows. It is not fair that the Englishman should have to share the disgrace that attaches to this nuisance. The sparrow was imported in large number after 1873. Sentimental people liked to have them hovering around their dwellings. Certain misguid- ed individuals believed he would keep down insect pests. Between 1870 and 1885 be appropriated 59,000 square miles of new territory in America and to-day there is scarcely a place that he does not infest. The sparrow has four broods in ‘ a year and each brood is usually six birds, so that in 10 years one pair would have 275,716,983,698 descendants. This bird has four bad faults : Ha eats grain. is very filthy, nips cfl' buds and driven away native birds. Out of 767 opinions received from good authorities concerning them only 42 were favorabl. They ravage grainfie‘da, eepeclafly near towns EYou know what. an abominably ragged, slipehod dirty neat they build, often stopping waterplpea and always making a great deal of filth. But a Worse fault of the Sparrow is his destruction of sound buds in the spring. It had been supposed he was after insects in them but now it is known that such is not the case. An expert told me that he saw one nip of 19 sound peach buds and drop them down apparently for no other reason than pure cnesedneas. He drives away native and useful birds especially in insect season. He will never build a nest if he can steal one, but goes about to knock (fl orioles, swallows. robblns and other birds. I once found a sparrow caught by the leg with a horse- hair in my shed. I liberated him out of pity. In a few minutes I saw him fly in another window and tackle a swallow that was sitting on her nest on a rafter. The two pa‘rs waged a long war, each being masters of the nest in turn, but at last the swallows gave it up and went away. It is a folly to encourage the sparrow for the insects he destroys. He does eat a few grnbs such as the cabbage worm and some aphis, but even the young do not make insects more than 10 per cent. of their food and the adult birds much less. 0n the other hand he does great damage by driving away inseolivorous‘ birds and Prot. Riley says that the ter- rible ravages of the tussock moth in the apple trees is largely due to the disappear- ance of native birds before the sparrows. PROTECTED BIB OS. All our birds are protected by law except the crow, hawk. blue bird and sparrow. I think all these should be pro. tested too except the last. and for him I . have not a good word to say. There should be a gun license. It would be a hardship perhaps to some, but any sportsman would be willing to pay a small fee if it would tend to pre- serve the useful birds. It would save the birds and prevent a good many of these :u man’s-know-it-was-loaded " , incidents. 'Mr. Nash, the Toronto expert, told me that he has seen young; fellows come out of the Rosedale woods with a bushel basket full of birds chietfl y of useful sorts. ‘We must make no mistake about this matter. Protect our birds that protect us from such pests among our fruit treesv A number of questions were asked by the audience and answered by Mr. Bur. reil and Mr. Maxsom. These will be published at some future time. A vote of thanks was maved by Rev. L. S. Hugh. son, B. Th., seconded by Mr. W, H. Stevens, B.A., endorsed by Registrar fiarr and carried by a standing vote. The meeting closed with the National Anthem. Subscribe for Watchman-Warder THE ENGLLSH SPARROW ORIOLES AND ROBINS OTHER BIRDS. Bellevflle Mixed ........... . ..... ........ Port Hope Mixed via Bethany ..... .. ...... Toronto Mixed viz. Whitby 3nd Port Perry Toronto Exprea ............. ............. Port Hope Mail via. Peterboro.. . . .... ....... 11 03 on Tomato Mixed via Lornevilie .......... . . . .12 10 p.111 3311an Mixed ....... ., ........ ......... 2 40 pm Toronto Msil ........ ........ ............. 6 p.m Jobooonk Mixed... 6 p. Port Hope ExpremviaPeterboro.......... 8 p. ”@060! 848528 were 58 E 8 88: BB 8311an Mixed...... Toronto Express from Port Hope Port 110 Hall from Toronto.. . . OObOODn. Mixed................ Port Hope Mixed from Port Hope Toronto Mall trom Port Hope. . . . Port Ho E rose from Toronto Whitb. ix IIUIOIOOII ...... Belle lem:ed.......... ....... 8311an Mixed._ 8 40 nan Toronto Express from Port Hope.......... 8 60 tun Port 110 Mail from Toronto ........ ......11 00 mm Ooboeom. Mixed. ..... ...1010nan Port Hope Mixed fromPort Hope.......... 2 06 p.m Toronto 11:11 Iron Port Hope ........... ... 8 13 pm Port Ho E recs from Toronto..... 8 02 p.m Whitb ix ............... ............ 858 p.m Belle lemxed.......... ........... . ..... 1020p.m The 11.03 mall for Port Hope closes at the P. 0. at 10.458.31- The 8.55 mail for Toronto closes at 8.30. The 11.00 mail going north connects with the I. B. 85 0. RV. The 3.00 p. m. Leave Lindsay ..... . ..... . . ... . . . Leav Junction .............. . Arrive at I. B. 550. Junction.... Arrive atLlndaay....... ........ Lea of Peterborough, will visit Lindsay Every Wednesday at the Simpson House. Hours 10 3.111. to 4 pun. Consultation in Eye, Ear, Thtoat and Nose diseases.â€"4-I yr. STRENGTHENS WEAK LUNGS. Many persons are in a condition to invite Pneumonia. or Consumption by reason of inherited tendency or other causes. They catch 001d easilyâ€"find it difficult to get rid of an ordinary cough or cold. We would advise all such people to use Dr. Wood’s Norway Pine_Sy_rop. l‘ ,__Si__-!-_ -"I-t'iaâ€"Ja gfifidéfiufstrengthener and healer of the breathing organs, and fortifies the lungs against serious pulmonary diseases. Miss Clara Marshall, Moore, Ont, writes: "I have sufiered several years with weak lungs and could get no cure, so became discouraged. If I caught cold it was hard to get rid of it. I started using Dr. Wood’s Norway Pine Syrup, and as a result my cough has been cured and my lungs greatly strengthened." Lindsay MaIble Works ROBT. CHAMBERS ls prepared to furnish the pcon‘ of Lindsay ard aur- ruunding country with MOB UMENTS and HEAD- STONES, both Marble undGunite. specialty. . name a pnctictl workman, all ohonld see his dr-ims and compare prices betele pulchulug else- \xi. '0 . w UBKS -â€"In the ten of the Market on Cambridge- at.” opposite the packing house. ROBT CHAMBERS Dr. Wood’s Norway Pine Syrup. Remember Estimates promptly given on “I kinda of cemetery Marble Table Tape, Wuh Tops, Mantle Pieces. etc., that if your nervous system needs toning you will be miser- able vourself and make those you come in contact with mis- erable. Remember Ina. per box. five bore. for 82. All dmggists, at Sam Wmmma Sr. 00.. Tomato. Oak Bancmft................... ........ 11 00mm Junction............. .............. 2 202p.m at Junction.... ............ 1 46 p.m “Bancroft. ........ .............5 16 'pm UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT.â€"The under. aimed reepectiuhy informs the people of the County of Viotorie and the treVeilln public geueully, that he has leased the eb- ve bow for a term of years and has renovated and nautniahued it throughout,m¢1..g it one o! the meet. oemiorteble stopping phone to be found in Lindsey, Buying been for a numl-er o! yme engaged in catering to \he summer tennis! trade in Bobeeyeeou, my guests mav rely on the her! service at. all times, including.' a good table The u: will be kept. oupplied with good brands o! liquors and cigars, and Camera and others will find firsbclus mwmmodation tor teams in the commodious yard and stables. A cell will be appreciated; LT. R. LOCAL TIME-TABLE McCULLOUGH and 50¢. a bottle. Andruggists. that you cannot possibly be happy or successful unless you sleep soundly, eat heartily, and digest what you eat. that has never yet failed to cure any disease .caused by im- poverished blood, such as Pale Greenish or Sallow Complem‘on, Nervous Prostration, Weakness, Loss of Appetite, Dyspepsia and Stomach Disorders, Head- ache, Depression of Spirits, AN SION HOUSE, LINDSAY, Iack of Energy, Pufliness ~and Dark Circles under the E73, Pain in the Back, Kidney and Liver Disorders, and Catan'h. OPPCSITE 1 HE MriKET I. B. ,0. SERVICE. north train carries no mail. B. O. RAILWAY. G. T. R. SERVICE. uc-u V... ‘JIu-OOCOQ- DBPARTUBEB. oo-q-oocuo .ooo¢.-onuaon-a. GARNER HUNTER, Propriefigf. not. 5 16 p.m ; DR SUTTON, ‘ __ DENTIST - Member Royal Dental College. for Good Dentistryâ€"84. Honor graduate of Toronto University and Roy. College of Dental Surgeons. All the Intact mproved method. adopted and prices moderate. _ Qfieegver Anderson Nugent’a, opposite Veltch‘l DR. E. A. TOTTEN DEM EST, - LINDSAY Graduatezo! Toronto University‘apd Boyu Oolleg of Dental Surgeons. Every department of dentistry done in a prawn! and sciencmc manner :1; moderate prices. omce over Margan’s sz Stormâ€"17. Honor Gradmte 0! Toronto University Ind Boyd College of Denul Surgeon. All the lamest end improved branches of dentist: Suecemfully performed. Chuges modente OFFICE oyer Gregory‘s Drug Store, corner Kent uni thun DENTIST. - - LINDSAY What}: without pain by Gs! (Vitdiud Air odminlstered by him for 26 yeua with great mecca He studied the gas under Dr. Cotton, of New Yovh the 01131me of goo for extncting teeth. Dr. Cotton writes Dr. Neebnds that be has given the gas to 186,417 persons without. on accident. Dr. Noam use the best loco! pain obtundem. Beautiful uti- flcid teeth inserted at moderate prices. Plea” send specular-d before coming. Ofice nearly oppodte the Simpson House, Lindsay. -â€"23 DR. ARTH UR DAY DENTIST successes 1’0 nu: LATE on. HART llember 0! Toronto Dents! College sud Toronw University. A130 311de of American Doubl- U ‘ and residence north-east comet Peel and (hmbrldgam Telephone 61. â€"85. [2.160 COLLEGE-ST.. TORONTO EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT SPECIALIST U 9to 11:31.; 21:0 4p.m;7u8p.m Bai- (10110680 Wellington street. Telephona No.43. u of Toronvo Universitv Medical Mty, doc graduate of Trinity University, Toronto, and Member of College of Physicians sud Surgeena. Ontaxo. Ofice South-east corner Lindsay and Russell mach. Telephoue 107 .â€"23-1y. U 8.0. Ofieemd residuece Corner of Lindsay :nd Busellatxecta. Licenziate of Boy! College of Physicians and turgeune, Edinburgh. Licemhte of Midwifery, Edinburgh. Special altcmiun giwen to demgexy and diseases of wen-en. 'iciqzhcne So. U 0600 sud residence. Hugger-st" Linda), occ- ond door west 0! York-at. 05306 b ° ms, 9.00 a.m. to. 10.30 mm; 1.30 pm. to 3 p.m., md 7 no 8 12:. DB. J. SIMPSON, graduate (:1 Univ. of Trfixty 001., Toronto Medial Couege 0! H.) skins and Summons Ont. Lute of Bocku‘ood Asyaum, Kinsmen. Ora-J Tmnkisurgfon, Linden) Dxnuict. Lindsay. Fem. Hut Modern Dentistry practised in the mat dentiflc manner. Crown and Bridge Work I specialty. Ohm moderate. DR. SIMPSON, PHYSICIAN, 0mm and mid-Jun: ’Y-‘nm‘. .c? fir Am. 0p te the Dd} Houee, Kent-81., Lads}. D. F A; DEBSON. U- Senator for the ohmic Rank. Money to [oust Lowest Ewes. Office F0. 6 William Sta-eu- south. 0. H. HOPKINS. ONALD R. ANDE R 5 ON, Batista. Solicitcrkikc. 01! cc in untimely ‘J animus, Notaries, etc. Otfioe over 0mm Bulk. Kama" Llnduy. Money to Loan a wry Iowan-ates. "L masters. em. Solicitors for m. County 01' Vlmlhmdthe Bank of Montreal. Money talcum on mortgages at lowest currem ma. 0am... Wi‘flun-st" Lindsay. F. D. MOORE. ALEX. JACKSCS STEWART O’CON NOR.â€" Rnnidnrfl Nntmu‘ etc. mice over 0mm MCLAUGHLIN MCDIARs MID, Bun-lawn. Solicitors, an. messy and Ramon N13. Lindsay omce. haters mock, Kent-ct. We mlonning money on rm} «use an mos-tugs in sum hrgeymd mall, to uni! hon-om ,A As. - _.‘_. I,.._A._ o _‘.. J MOORE JACKSON- Bar- A..." .14 Solicitors Io: no Ocnntv of PETER BROWN, Auctioneer}, mum no“ 0nhfla-â€"Fsrm stock und- THOMAS SWAIN, JP... Auc-- M. ensues P. 0., Onudmâ€" 83hr conduct“ in my pm of the C921” 0! Durban umflyutnm myownimmulhu neigh- borhood Woodhulkiudadmumo and stock Ides. Terms momble. Also licensed to conduct asle- ot :11 kipdc in M_.dpoo wunnlp. Wmaed promptlyâ€"1L“. T. STEWART. The undersigned are prepared to loan money. in large amounts on good F cum or Town petty at 4% per cut. pct hnnum. Sum-AH loans at slightly incxeased talc: . McSWEYN WELDON. Solicitors, etc., nenfiOnurloZBank buik’ing, Lindsay. l Eln Omemee every Monday-31. R. J. McLAUGHuN F. A. Balm DENTIST. H. GROSS DENTIST, - . F. A. WALTERS {576:3 10de (m! at the fiery lcowt rues cl not. We do not land on now: or cum! “cavity . NEELANDS .. A. E. VROOMANâ€"Ofiice .. G. S. RYERSON, . A. GILLESPIE, CA. AND WHITE, GRADUATE OF H. HOPKINS, Barrister. JEFFERS. Office hours fiarristcrs, fut. @mtistrp promptly atteudpQ to flhpsisians (3111;110an OFFICEâ€"94 Kent Street .v., UNDSAY.‘ LINDSAY UNDSIJ C en t. toad! borrowun, van lmth m 0‘ 5t THE'WA‘,

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy