Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman Warder (1899), 6 Jul 1899, p. 10

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10 Eliâ€"HERS when you insure patronize the Parmers’ Union Mutual fire lnsuranoo Gomnanu. '- This is your own County Co npany. Property, Country Szhools are insured by this Company. Blanket Policies are issued. The rates are lower than those of any other Company in the County. For particulrs apply R. G. Cornefl, SECRETARY AND AGENT No. 8 William Street, Lindsay. w The. Victoria Loan and SAVINGS COMPANY Incorporated under Cap. 169, R. S. 0. Head Office, LINDSAY, Ox’r. ad HONEY T0 LOAN On town and farm property misurrent rates of interest. Costs moderate, and no delay. Savings Department Debentures issued for periods of from one to five years for sums of $100 and upwards. Interest coupons attached, payable butt-yearly at 4 per cent. ' Deposits of St .00 and upward taken, Withr drawable at any time, upon which current rates of interest will be allowed. Jonn Maowood.‘ James Low. President Secretary WHAT IS SAID BY nsl “ The Chainless Crescent is much, cleaner and more easily cleanerJ than chain wheels.” “I have ridden my Chainless .vheel nearly 2000 miles, and it is in perfect condition, so far as the machin 'y is concerned.” “ They are more durable and less troublesome than any other wheel manufactured.” "I have had my Crescent four years and up to this date I have never had one cent of repairs.” wâ€" All are welaome to come and inspect these matchless wheels for themselves at J. RlGG’S stonn LINDSAY Minstgyonks ROBERT CHAMBERS 5 prepared to furnish the people of Lind- say and surrounding, country with MONUMENTS and HEADSTONES. both Marble and Granite. Estimates work. marble Table Tape, Wash Tops, Hamel Pieces, etc lpecinlty. . Being a practical workman, all should see his d signs and com are prices bcfc where. p , re purchasing else WORKS â€"ln the rear of the Marketer: Cambri t.. oppositd Matthews‘ packingr house. dge ROBT CHAMBERS promptly given on all kinds of cemetery Muskoka Tourist Season Return Tickets from now until Snow flzes next fall at FARE AND THIRD. Call at Exprem Office for your tickets. Cheaper rptes than ever to Rochester via North King. GEO. WILDER, Lindsay, Ont. id’s Phosphodine, "reat English Remedy. -d recommended by all in Canada. Onl reli- f.ne discove . 83': ranked to cure all all effects of abuse sessive use of To- Iaiésg Sign receipt rn address. 7 isor, Ont Lindsay by Farm and Churches only { morsel for their scandnlization, AND WITH HAND TO THE MOUTH, CREATING A FUNNEL, THE GOSSIP VOICES ONLY EVIL. These Precious Liars Are the Worst Foes of Sociéty, and Afect .an Intere‘lb in Humanity Only to Blast the Fair Fame of the Individualâ€"hlmage’s Holy Anathema! Washington, Julir 2.-~Rev. Dr. Tal- mage preached this morning from the text. Romans i, 29, “Full of envy, mur- der, debate, deceit, malignit‘yâ€"whlsnen era.” He said: Paul Was here calling the long roll of the world’s villaiLY. and he puts in the midst of this roll these persons known in all cities and communities and places as whisperers. They are so called because they generally speak undervoice and, in a confidential way, their hand to the side of their mouth acting as a funnel to keep the precious information from wandering into the wrong car. They speak softly not because they have lack of lung force or because they are over- powered with the spirit of gentleness, but because they want to escape the conse- quences of defamation. If no one hears but‘ the person whispered unto and the offender be arraigned. he can deny the whole thing, for whiSperers are always firstrclass liars! Some people Whisper because they are hoarse from a cold or because they wish 1 to convey some useful information with- out disturbing others, but the creatures photographed by the apostle in my text give mut‘lled utterance from sinister and depraved motive. and sometimes you can only hear the sibilant sound as the letter “S” drOpS from the tongue into the listen- ing‘ ear, the brief bias of the serpent as it projects its venom. Whisperers are masculine and feminine, with a tendency to majority on the side of those who, are called “the ‘lor‘ds of creation.” Whisperers are heard at every twindow of bank cashier and are heard in all counting rooms as well as in settling societies and at meetings of asylum direc- tors and managers. They are the worst foes of society, responsible for miseries innumerable; they are the scavengers of the World. driving their cart through every community, and to-day I hold up for your: holy anathema and execratlon these whisperers. From the frequency with which Paul speaks of them under difi‘erent' titles I conclude that he must have suffiercd somewhat from them. His personal pres- ence was very defective. and that made him perhaps the target of their ridicule, and besides that he was a bachelor, per- sisting in his celibacy down into the sixtiesâ€"indeed, all the way throughâ€"â€" .and, some having failed in their cannu- b'ial designs upon him, thelittle mission- ! ary was put under the raking fire of these no ’doubt a. rare and he cannot keep his patience any longer, and he lays‘hold. of these miscreants of the tongue and gives them a very hard set- ' ting down in my text among the scoundrclly. and the murderous. “Envy, murder, debate. deceit, malignityâ€"whis- perers.” The law of libel makes quick and stout grip of open slander. If I” should in a plain way, calling you by name, charge you with fraud or theft or murder or uh- clca'nness, to-morrow morning g1 might have peremptory documents served on me, and I would have’ to pay in dollars and‘cents for the damage I had done your' chpracter. But these creatures spoken of'in my text are so small that they escape the fine tooth comb of the law. They go on, and they go on, escapé ing the judges and the juries and the penitentiarles. The district attorney can- not find them, the sherifl cannot find them, the grand jury cannot find them. Shut them ofl from one route of perfldy, and they start on another. You cannot by the force of moral sentiment persuade them to desist. You might as well read the Ten Commandments to a flock of crows, expecting. them to retreat under the force of moral sentiment. They are to be found everywhere: these whisperers. I thinktheir paradise is a country village of about 1,000 or 2,000 people where everybody knows everybody, but' they also are to be found in large quantities in all. our cities. _ / They have a prying disposition. Theyr look into. the basement windows it the tables of their nel‘ghbors and can tell just what they have morning and night to eat. They can see as fair through a key- hole as other people can see with a door wide open. They can hear conversation on the opposite side of the room, Indeed, the world to them is a whispering gal- lery. They always put the were: con- structio'n ’on. everything. Some morning. a wife descends into the street, her eyes damp with tears;- and that is a stimulus to the tattler and is enough to set pp a business for three or four weeks. “I guess that husband and wife don't live, happily together. I won~ der I_f.he hasn’t been abusing her? It's outrageous! He ought to be discipliie'd. He ought to be brought up before the church. PH 36 right over to m. neigh- bors, and I’ll let them know a. ut this matter.” She rushes in all out of breath to a neighbor‘s house and says: “Oh, Mrs. Allear, have you heard the dreadful news? Why, our neighbor. poor thing, came down oi! the steps in a flood of tears. That brute of a husband has been abusing her. Well, it’s just as I expected. I saw him the other afternoon very smil- ing and very gracious to some one who smiles back, and I thought then I wduld just go up to him and tell him he had better go home and look after his wife and family, who probably at that very time were upstairs crying their eyes out. Oh, Mrs. Allear, do have your husband go over and put an end to this trouble! It's simply outrageous that our neigh- borhood should be disturbed in this way! It’s awful I” The fact is that one man or woman set on fire of this hellish spirit will keep‘a whole neighborhood a-boil‘». It does not require any very great brain. The chief requisite is that the woman have u. small family or no family at all, because if she have a large family then she would have to stay at home and look after them. It is very important‘ that she be single or have no children at all, and then she can attend to all the secrets of the ne hborhood all the time. A woman with a rge family makes a very poor whispuer. It is astonishing how these whisperer-s rather up everything. They know every. in; that happens. There are telephone ‘ telegraph wires reaching from their tool! the houses in the-neighbor- ‘whisperers; He Was Q . a... , -...‘~¢...~'.â€"....~....... .. .. N... M .. IA ‘wornan came in confessional to a hood. They have no taste for healthy news, but for the scraps and peelings thrown out of the scullery into the back yard they have greafiavidity. On the day when there Is a new scandal in' thg newe- papers they have no time to go abroad. On the day when there are four or five columns of delightful .privato letters published in a divorce case she stays at heme and reads and reads and reads. No time for her Bible that day, but toward night, perhaps. she may find time to run out a little while and see whether there are any new developments. Satan does not have to keep a. very sharp lookout fer his evil dominion in that neighborhood. He has let out to her the whole contract. She gets husbands- and wives into a quarrel and brothers and sisters into antagonism. and she dis- gusts the pastor with the flock and the flock with the pastor. and she makes neighbors who before Were kindly dig- posed toward each other over-suspicious and critical, so when one of the neighbors passes by in a carriage they hiss through their teeth and say, “Ah, We could all keep carriages if we never paid our debts!” When two or three whisperers get to- gether, they stir a caldron of trouble, , which makes me think of the three witches of “Macbeth” dancing around a boiling caldron in a dark cave: ‘ Double, double, toil and trouble, Fire burn and caldron bubble. Fillet of a fenny snake In the caldron boil and bake; Eye to newt and toe to frog, Wool of bat and tongue of dog, Adder's fork and blind worm’s sting, Lizard's leg and o'w1et’s wing - For a charm of powbrful trouble, Like a. hell both boil and bubble. Double, double, toll and trouble, Fire burn and caldron bubble, Scale of dragon, tooth of wolf, Witches’ mummy, mow and: gulf [ Of the ravin’d salt sea shark; Make the gruel thick and stark; Add thereto a. tiger’s chaudron For the ingredients of our caldron. Double, double, toil and trouble; Fire burn and caldron bubble; Cool it with n buboon’s blood, Then the charm lS firm and good. I would only change ShakeSpeare in this. that where he puts the word “witch” I should put the word “whis- perer.” Ah, what it cauldron! Did you ever get a taste of it? I have more re- spect for the poor waif of the street that goes down under the gaslight with no home and no Godâ€"for she deceivcs no one as to what she isâ€"than I have for these: hugs of respectable society who . cover up their tiger claws with a fine shawl and bolt the hell of their heart with a diamond breastpin. The work of masculine whisperers is chiefly seen in the embarrassment of busi- ness. Now, I suppose there are hundreds of men her‘e who at some time have been . in business trouble. I will undertake to say that in nine cases out of ten it was the result of some whisperer’s work. The whisperer uttered some suSpicion in re- gax-d to your credit. You sold your horse and carriage because you had no use for them, and the whisperer said: “Sold his horse and carriage because he had to sell them. The fact that he sold his horse and carriage shows he is going dOWn in busi- nesa” One of your friends gets embarrassed, and you are a little involved with him. The whisperer says: “I wonder if he can stand under all this pressure? I think he is going down. I think he will have to give up.” ,Yon ‘horrow money out eta bank, and the director whispers outside bout it, and after awhile the suspicion gets fairly started, and it leapsjrom one whispcrcr's lips to another whisperer’s ‘ lips until all the people you owve want their money and want it right away, and l the business circles come around you like afpack of wolves, and. though you had assets four times more than were neces- l sary to meet your liabilities. crash went everything. Whisperers! Oh, how much business men have suffered! Sometimes in the circles of clergyman we discuss why it is that a great many merchants do not go to church. I will tell you why they do not go to church. By the time Saturday night [comes they are worn out with the annoyances of business 1 They have had enou’gh meantime ctlced upon them tenses their. whole nervous system a-twitch. Rather than the defamation of good names it seems to me it would be almost aé honorable and useful if you just took ' a box of matches in your pmket and a razor in your hand and go through the streets and see how many houses you can burn down and h w many throats ydn can cut, That is not a much worse busi- ness. The destruction of a man’s name to worse than the destruction of his life. priest and told him that she had been slandoring her neighbors. The priest promised‘her absolution on condition of her performing a penance. He gave her a thistle top and said. “You can take that thistle and scatter the seeds all over the flel ;’ She went and did so and came bac . “Now,” said the priest, “gather up all those needs”, She said, "I can't ” “4h," he said, “I know you can't. Neither can you gather up the mill words you spoke about your neighbors.” All food men and all g’odd women have sometimes had detractors after them John Wesley’s wife whispered about him, whispered all over England, kept on whispering about that good munâ€"as good a man as ever livedâ€"and kept on whispering until the connubial relation was dissolved. Jesus Christ had these ‘ whisper-era after him, and they charged him with drinking too moch and keeping bad com- pany. “A wine bibber and the friend of publicans and sinners.” You take the best man that ever lived and put a detec- tive on his track for-ten years, watching where he goes and when he comes and with aldetermination to miscontrue every- 1 thing and to think hogces here for a bad purpose and there for a bad purpose, with that determination of destroying him, at the end of ten years he will be held despicable in the sight of a great many. people. - If it‘is an outrageous thing to despoil a. man’s character, how much worse is it to distance a woman’s reputation? Yet that evil grows fnom century to century, and it is all done by whisperer-s. A sus- picion is started. The next whisperer who gets hold of it states the suspicion as a proveu fact, and many a good woman, as honorable as your wife or your mother, has been "1136“ out of all kindly annotations. a whispered into the grave. Some people say there is no hell, but if there be no hell for such a deepollor of womanly character it is high time that some philanthropist bunt one. But there is such a place establish- ed. and what a time they will have whgn all the whisperers get down there to- gether rehearsing: things! Evermng carnival of mud.‘ Were it not for the u... . iIt is loose at one end and can swing . in the market?” The servant replied? “_I - blasphemy. the organ of defamation, the = which God so wonderfully created as the , whisper, .. ‘ . , y,- ,,.,, .._, , , u ., .. l y .L‘ . . . > .m ,1 l; . IHE WATCH’M‘AN-WARDER :' LINDSAY. Hour. ‘ WHISPER AND SHRU G comfortable . surroundings you might they would be glad to get there. In that region where they are all bad, what opportunities for exploitation by these whispers“. On earth, to desde their neighbors sometimes they had to “lie about them. but down there they can say the worst thing's possible about their neighbors and tell the truth. ‘Jubilee of whisperers. Semi-heaven . of scandal- lmongers stopping their gabble about HOIIIG ‘566K6I’ their diabolical neighbors only long enough to go up to the iron gate and as some newcomer from the earth, “What is the last gossip in the city on earth where we used to live?” . . Now, how are we to war against this iniquity which curses every community on earth? First, by refusing to listen to or believe a whisperer. Every court of the land has for a law and all decent com- munities have for a law that you must hold people innocent until they are proved guilty. There is only one person worse than the whisperer, and that is the man or woman who listens without pro- test. The trouble is, you hold .the sack while they fill it. The receiver of the stolen goods is juist as bad as the thief. An ancient writer declares that a slender- er and a man who receives the élander ought both to bevhangcdâ€"the one by the. tongue and the other by the earâ€"and I agree with him. ‘ EXGUI’S To 13116 patient and darry him. all through the community asking people if they really thought it a. case of smallpox. That would be very bad for the patient and for all the neighbors. Do not retail slander-s and whispering. Do not make yourself the inspector of warts, and the supervisor of carbuncles, and the commissioner for street gutters, and the holder of stakes for a dog fight. Can it be that you, an immortal man; that you, an immortal woman, can find no better business than to become a gutter inspector? Besides that, at your family table allow no detraction. Teach yOur ‘children to speak well of others. Show them the difference between a bee and a waspâ€"the one gathering honey, the other thrusting a sting. I read of a family where they kept what they called “A Slander Book,” and when any slanderous words were uttered in the house about anybody or detraction uttered it was all put down in this book. The book was kept carefully. For the first few weeks there wet-cu great many entries, but after awhile there Were no entries at all. Detraction stopped in that household. It would be a good thing to have a slander book in all households. Are any of you given to this habit of whispering about others? Let me per- suade you to desist. Moun’t Taurus was a great place for eagles, and cranes would ' l'ire Jclv 1-4 ll. I V VIII]. sun l .60 Dali canaoian North West. Going July :3 Returning until Sept. 12(All Rail or as. Alhama) ’ Going July :8 Returning until Sept. 1; All Bar] of and ”imam: manner a: 8.8. Alberta) ‘ ’i J‘- Mitchell, Agent Agent C,P. R, - 60 K cutest. , Lindsay When you hear something bad about 3 ‘ if: lir‘ w‘a. 'ul) (; -Chll!’ 'n of an‘and 5.8., Lindsay, to Pleas- In". WINIIPEG RESTON- - - 3’ 'uoosomu com stem-m moosmw marten-- IOIIS CALGARY-- “MAINE... . . . . ESTEVAN - . BlNSGAIITIIu - - - PRINCE ALBERT l From all points in Ontario . . 170.. . . ...... u e a... $28 on $35 ...-e oooooo goo-o. eeeeee '0'... ...... I llllillijt: 'v'i $40 ,ee THE STEAMER. '\ _ it. lire v. to Crowley t Pod . in “I 5.8 , Dunsford, 4 (.rl ,'_ :zda y tr Penelon Falls. ALICE- your n'eighbcrs, do not go allover and ‘ /. .’ ‘ .t ask about it, whether it is true, and .////; p p ,5 scatter it and spread it. You might as ‘I;~,.,Es3.'hgi7€4( 3- 333.3333 E ETHI‘L well go to a smallpox hospital and take a 131431.34 Iii-1'2. :2gg; I: EXCURS IONS I 'u; 22 ~."3’o"h Victiii Agricultural Smiety, from laiilmfs o Bilbo-nygeon. 23~ (2.0.0. ". an I Farmer-e, Jauetvlhe. Valentin, r‘lum P« m'. Jud McGil’s to Linlsay. ‘ low iiiâ€"l, izd a) ‘3. Iieuiats Institute, to Llidlaw’s, Balsam Lal c. ’8 Island. S S, Dunsford, to T. V. Canal, .in 7-â€" Prcsbyt. ri: r 9.8., Lindsay. to Pleasant It. to Chemong or July iii-1': mi. e Bu 3, True Blues and Orangemcn, l. M. KNOWLSON. ... ”hmâ€" _ .---._. ..___..., “Kornotho Lakes .A/sM/ww-m LINDSAY THE FAST STEAMER “ MAPLE LEAF” Commencing THURSDAY, MAY 11th, fly along that way, and they would will run on the I'-llowing time-table until fur- cacirle so loud that the mgles would know of their coming, and they would Leave cocoons-'1: ............... 6.40 a.m. pounce upon them and destroy them. It .8.“ “ is will that the old cranes found this out, . . .. . . A rm». H I ~AY . 1y .10.:40 " and before they sorted on their man: LI... u..~.l..v.‘.".‘.‘7.‘.‘..‘.’.’.’ ...... a... p... they would always have a stone in their Ar i.» STEKGlgl; POINT ........ 4.15 " i - .. NIGEL!) ‘ALLS... ......4.45 "- ruoutn so they could not cookie, and then H COHHCONK ............... 6.30 they would fly imperfect safety. Oh, my friends, be as wise as the old cranes and avoid the folly of the young cranes. Do not cackle. (Tabocoxk to Lindsay .. . . .. ...... .. Let me charge you, my friends. to ' ‘3°"“""“' ‘ ‘ ”*‘ne' "‘ Ft”! ----------- make right and holy use of the tongue. ”Md” l” either way, but it is fastened at the other end to the floor of your menth, and that makes you reopensible for: ‘the way it wags.’ Xanthus, the philosopher, told his servant thrit on the marrow he was ‘going to have some friends to dine. and :told him to get the best thing he could find in the market. The philosopher and his guests sat down the next day at the table. They had nothing but tongueâ€"â€" ro ute. , four ‘or ’flxe courses of tongueâ€"tongue cooked in this Way and tongue cooked. in that way, and the philosopher lost his patience and said to his servant, “Did ’t I tell you to get the best thing in t 3 market?" He said: “I did get' the best thing in the market. Isn't the tongue the organ of sociality. the organ of elo- quence. the organ of kindness, the organ of worship?” Then Xanthus said, “Te-morrow 1 want you to get the worst thing in the market.” And on the‘morrow the philos- . opher sat at the table, and there was nothing there but tongueâ€"four or five courses of tongudâ€"tongue' in this shape THE : and tongue in that shape, and the philos- opher. again lost his patience and said, “Didn’t I tell you to get the Worst thing did, for isn't the tongue the organ of organ of lying?" ‘ Oh, my friends, employ the tongue organ of taste, the organ of deglutiti‘on, the organ of articulation to make others happy and in the service of God! If you whisper goodâ€"encouragement to the fallen and hope to the lost. Ah, my friends, the time will soon come when we will all whisper! The‘ voice will be enfecbled in the last sickness, and, though that voice could la'ugh and shout and sing. and halloo until the forest echoes answmzod. it Will,be so fee then we can only whisper consolation to those whom we leave behind and only whisper our hope of heaven. While I speak this verygncment there are hundred? whispering their last utter- InQBS- Oh, when that solemn hour comes to you and to me, as come soon it will, Arri e at be made with , may it be found that we did our best to serve Christ, and to cheer. our comrades in the earthly struggle, and that we con- secreted not only our hand, but our tongue to God. So that the shadows that fall around our dying pillow shall not be the evening twilight of a gathering night. but the. morning twilight Of an everlasting day. ,, This morning at half past 4 o‘clock I looked out of my window, and the stars Were very dim. I looked out a few moments after, and the stars were almost invisible. I looked out an hour or two afterWard. Not a star was to be soon. What was the matter with the stars? Had they melted into darkness? No. They had melted into the glorious light of a Sabbath morn. M why Mott-a Fly to Flames. Moths fly against the candle flame- be- openlng an ordinary hen’e ‘ for mg- fast the other day discourage-gnu. 111- .1; cells measuring 12 or 14 inches inside, . I l s'. \ ' ‘ x « . ‘ ’ f *‘f’ “.1 .,,~...-,. .- our...“ . . ‘. W " moment». arm . «W . - . n... rm» , Wtapnunomm , W W . mmmmw ...mrwm.wtmm WWW Steamer Wisl call at an lr‘reiz'h' and parcels carri ’1" ll} 3 550:7 .41 ther notice : “ 'AZ’NELON FALLS........... “ STUBGEON POINT.........9.15 r‘enr Inn Pails. . . . . . F‘ Am: 01- Paris to Sturgeon Point ...... i-‘cnclou Psi s to Lindsay ............ landing SCHEDULE BF FABES= Einrle Return 70c Si 00 35’.) 5°C 20c 25c 23c 35c 85c 50c when signalled. at low rates. Favorable terns fr-r small excursion partia to any point on For furth 4r information apply to CAPT. J. D. VARCOE, OWNER, LIIDSAY P.O. “Karnatha Lakef’ SEASON OF 1899. v': I ":‘Zbasni iv". . _ . K . \.. _, --___.n ‘\ “is?! 331-34 .. 7.. “"‘mlv (LIMITED) geon Point will run I». .uble Trips as follows :â€" Leav- Bubceygeon at. . . ..6.15 a.xn., 8.10 pm. they at. . . ..8.80 a.m., 5.30 p.m, .in RETURN [KG WILL Le'ave Lindsay at ....... 11.20 run. 5 45 p.11. urive at. Bobcaygeon at. 1.35 p.rn.. 8.00 p.m, Sturgeon Point, Single Fare, 350. II M Return Bobcaygeon, Single 0‘ Return G RAIN CA R RYI NG.â€"Arrnsrements can the Captain for calling at an i the Lake for grain. y po at on J. W. DIAM W LII. 8. 0F 0. STEAIBPAT 00-, Cobourg, Port Hepe and - cause their eyes can bear on! a small ‘ amount of lisht. When. therezire, they Lea‘ye 5:130:10” """" ' """""" 2-30 P-“f‘o come within the light of ,a candle their An," 0mg; """ .' """" ""25 ,, 81811‘ in "PPM-“wed and their, vision « m“¢,'(ޤ (i ' ' ' ” ' ’ '7'15 u confused. and “they cannot distinguish ' ' l- o, ------ .7.45 ObJectsitbeyufm-m. “10 light new and .m‘m 30“”: fly ash net a flame. Lem" Rodi??? (N.Y.C.'jl ..... . . ”3.20 as). An Extraordinary Egg, ArsvePCobolug. . . l l l .b. 1111:1111... 1:3: p.11). A 00111617 Worker at Walkden upon 0!! Hope. .............. . .2 05 “ “-504 “Murmur. Lindsay :néidfin Trent Valley Navigation Go. DOUBLE TRIPS On and 1"er THURSDAY. IUNE Ist, the ES‘TURION -PLYING BETWEENâ€"- Bobcaygeon, Lindsay and Stur- 50c. 75c. " $ I .00 EN T, Capt. (Limited consisting apparently of entrain. H. H. I ~ suck, wire. , , . . 15' one -, G LDERShlmk-iw 9 . . . 6.} 17‘1“”, ml. . for Good venting.“ 3 ’ COM. . other sales promptly atteujmf to. at five per cent... on First Town Proper-q \‘ 0011.1.“ , DR. sortdh,‘ tanner - Linn cofiction graduate of Toronto SAY ego of Dental Surgecn. . f, 2’3”“ ”33.33.?“ and price. mt; 1110f: E hoteL-fifr Anderson N Ugo If; DR. E. A. TOTTEV non IST, Lists" Graduate of Toronto ULivergf. .- of Dental Surgeous. “'d “out i.. Every department of d~nti=fi over Margan’s Drug store ~371£ra1c prim DENTIST. Honor Graduate of Tor .nzc College of Dental Surgeons. All the latest and imrrc 2 ‘ d 513* h Successfully performed, (3,, ,_ 1° 93 of We? Gregory's Drug 81...». “'3‘” ”‘C'dem. Univemty Md 4‘ meetsâ€"31.1% ""7“" Kent.“ r ; DR. NEELANB’§‘\ DENTIST, ..'. 1.: C.» r . administered by him IO) 20 3 ears “1:: if? .‘ He Studied the gas under Dr Cotton, V ’ the originator of gas for extracting Lee writes Dr. Neelands that‘s-e Laid gjv 186,417 persons without. an accident. 0, 5 uses the best local pain Cit-:tun’iers. 3.3;,“ l (mini teeth inserted at moderate prices. Pia, ' apostalcard before coming. C‘Ece nearlv ., '7 the Simpson House, Lindsay. .‘m ' DR ARTH UR DAY DENTIST successes TO THE LATE on. m Member of Toronto Dental C.“ “egre- . Lniversity. Also gradihtc of American , OI H. ‘ 1h. 9,. ‘ en the M Most Modern Dentistry practised in the scientific manner. Crown and Bridge Work a specialty. Charges moderate. orrtca_94 Kent 5 Bhgsirians R. A. E. VRooiiEsl. and residence north-ens: corner ' Cambridgem Telephone 51. P â€"â€"‘â€"â€"-â€"â€" - :._' ' “i "w me“ we - R. JEthAS. SLKGEO. . . to Gaol and Surgeon to G? R ‘n .- ’ District. ' , . 8 p.m. Residence 30 V. i»'"'°.fv_‘ A Office hours 1’. 'c '2 a.m.' 2 to t 1 are" MEI I!" " ‘5. i No. 43. R. WHITE, GRADUATE it. D of Toronto L'nlrcrsitv Medea: F" ’ graduate of Trinity E'niversity, Tomntc. 8:?33 ' of Chase of Physicians and Surgeons. 0w Office South-east corner Lindsay and Russet .. . - Telephone 107â€"23 13'. DR. A GILLESPIE, on S.O. Ofiee and residnoce Oornsroi ~~ and unseen mu. Licentiate of Bevel on... T ' Pbymfzm and Surgeons, Eiinburzh. ' Limos Midwrfery, Edinburth. Special attention given 5;; digger-y and diseases of women. 'IeLepthe ~ DR. SIMPSON, PHYSICIA Ofice and residence. Basses-1,. Liam“, ond door west of York-st. Office h C urs. 9.00 La. 10.30 am; 1.30 pm. to 8 p.m.. and 7 to 8 pm. ' J. SIMPSON, graduate of Hair. of Trinity 3; Tomato Medical College of Physicians and .. . - Ont. Late of Bookwood Asylum, Kingston Trunk Sui-econ, Lindsey District. may. ary, 4th, 1891. ‘Jndmaliog «give, ard ‘ - satisfacio F.nn FINE T garristrrs, «Sct. .3..- H. HOPKIS'S, B L. G' Solicitor for the Ontario Bank. lent! ' . V" been at Lowst Estes. Office 1‘0. 6 WW -‘ " loath. G. H. HOPKINS. A. P. DEVLIN, BARRISTE I Solicitor, etc, County Crown A , Clerk of the Peace. Mindsay. 0500, h“ Block, foot of Kent Street. 'CSWEYN ANDERSON: Barristers, Solicitors. etc. Ofice, 1M 9°]? 99W“ the Dal: House, Kent Skeet, Lin“!- JOHN MCSWEYN DONALD R. AND ' "' STEWART O‘CONNOR ' Notaries, etc. urifce not Mk. Kent-EL, Lindsay. Money to Loan “'3’ lowest rates. it. srswanr. 2.. v. c‘con'oa. N â€"â€"_______.â€"â€"â€"â€"-Iâ€"" KENNY WELDOX. 3“ RIS'I'EBS, SOLICITORS, E'I‘C- Hamilton‘s Block, Kent-5’... taunt-i3. ’19 TO LOAN at very Lowest Hans. n. J. KENNY. l. r. W1 MOORE JACKSONâ€"Ba: ‘ ' etc. Sorrows re: the 0cm” Victoria and the Bank of Montreal. Honey ‘0 .- on moflngno at lowest current ram 0" .- Winning, Lindsay. F. D. noose. MCLAUGHLIN McDIAR- “B; W, $1.22“... .’.:‘lt..‘;i.‘;‘:§..‘;‘i‘;".'.“ em mortgage In some lsrgcgand small, to on the best terms and at the vet! I ”d W M ALEX. JACKSO‘ interest. We do not. lend on titres or ch!» K J. McLAUGiiLIN F. A. IIcDI ‘gluttionrtrs I.” PETER BROWN. Aucggf...’ Ookwood P.O., Ontarioâ€"WW no? more" eel ante. Sales can be arranged for at IAN Office. THOMAS SWA ticnecr, Caesa‘ea P.O.. conducted in any partof “‘9 . ll reasonab as in m' own immodl‘“ I, need ii: all kinds of . and cruel- sales. 'lierms reasonable- conduct sales or .11 kinds in trauma”. ' (money to 2303“ :_.â€"__J_â€"-â€"â€""____:’/â€"/ MONEY T0 LotN ‘ g. If We hove a large amount of “win“ “glm‘ \' On :‘cnnd’ ,0‘ to suit borrowers. McSWEYN Term.

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