I ‘J 4W“ an a, .4; *‘Imw-e‘ Q: “ W‘s... a v'\ I “‘5‘." ‘33“ ‘1’" "- some " r... . _ ...:-cu. . We» . ., _ 0| ________________.___...__.â€"â€" saying. “Go ye. and tell that fox.†Matâ€" #Mf/fl.‘ l ; FARMERS ‘ O I when you insure patromze the I . famors’ Union Mutual Hrs smmmo I lnsuranoo Gomoanu. - ! Property, Country Schools and Churches only are insured by this Company. Blanket Policies are issued. The rates are lower than those of any other Company in the County. For particuirs apply R. G. Cornefl. SECRETARY MID AGENT V This is your own County Company. Farm No. 8 William Street, Lindsay. I The Victoria Loan and, Incorporated under Cap. 169, R. S. 0. Head Oflice, LINDSAY, ONT. “ l’lON BY TO LOAN On town and farm property aficurrcnt rates of interest. Costs moderate, and no delay. Savings Department Debentures issued for periods of from one to ï¬ve years for sums of $100 and upwards. Interest coupons attached, payable hatf-yeariy at 4 per cent. ' I DCpUs‘liS of Si .00 and upward taken, With- dravsbie at any time, upon which current rates of interest Will be allowed. JOiill MGQWOOG. JdlilBS LOW. President Secretary youth often leads to reckless- ness. Young people don’t take care of themselves, get over-heated, catch cold, and allow it to settle on the kid- . neys. They don't realize the ’ signiï¬cance of' backacheâ€" i think it will soon pass awayâ€" i but it doesn't. Urinary Trou- ‘ bles come, then Diabetes, Bright’s Disease and shattered health. A young life has been sacriï¬ced. Any help for it ? Yes! DOAN’S KIDNEY PILLS. These conquerors of Kidney Ills are making the rising generation healthy and strong. . I Mrs. G. Grisman, 505 Adelaide St., London, I Dr t.. says: “My daughter, now r3 years old, has had weak kidneys since infancy, and he health as a. conseuuence has always been poor. Two hexes of Doan‘s Kidney Pills have removed I l cverysvmptom of kidney trouble,and restor (1 her to ports-ct health. I am truly thankful or glue gust benent they have conferred upon ex." I l MiEBiE l‘filiiKSI REBEill CHAMBERS is prepared to furnish the people of Lind s-â€"v and -.trronndin.: counmy with MONLFMENTS and HEADSTONES. both Marble and Granite. Ermine-nu promptly given on All kinds of cemetery work Mort-i6 Tah'e lube. Wash Tops. Mantel Pieces, etc specialty. 86ng i practical workmangil should [me his d signs and compare prices before purchasing she where. WORKS.â€"in in rear ofthe Market on Cambridge t., opposite Mmthhi‘“ 9' packing house. RUST CHAMBERS lioskoka Tourist Season Ila-turn Tickets from now until 8-. *w fl'rS next fall at FARE AND THIRD. Call at Express unite for your tickets. Cheaper r-u es slim ever to Rochester via North King. GEO. WILDER Express Office. Lindsay, Ont. ' Wood's Phosphodine, ‘ ' mormtnngzehnemedy. ‘ Sold and recommended by all ggists in Canada. 03er reli- dru able medicine discove riliustretionâ€"for smile they ‘ hyperboleâ€"Christ practically 812 l . ,_; ,, 7641908 guaranteed to cure all ; schices to-day is not. too much vivacity, INCONSISTENCIES . REV. pa. TALMAGE IN HIS SERMON DISCUSSES some OF THEM. e We Are Very Punctiliou About Small Things, But Neglectfnl of Aflnire of Great Magnitudeâ€"Pointed Remark- That may Well Do rendered Over by People of All Classes. Washington. July 16.-â€"Rcv. Dr. Tal- mage took for his text this morning Matthew xxiii, 24, “Yo blind guides, which strain at a gust and swallow a camel.†He said: A proverb is compact wisdom, knowl- edge in chunks, a library in a sentence, the electricity of many clouds discharged in one bolt, a river put through a mill race. When Christ quotes the proverb of the text, he means to set forth the indi- crous behavior of those who make a great bluster about small sins and have no appreciation of great ones. In my text a small insect and a large quadruped are brought into comparisonâ€"e gnat and a camel. You have in museum or on the desert seen the latter, a great, awkward. sprawling creature. with back twp stories high and stomach having a collection of reservoirs for desert travel, an animal for- bidden to the Jews as food and in many literatures entitled “the ship of the desert.†The gnat spoken of in the text is in the grub form. It is born in pool or pond, after a few weeks becomes a ohry- sahs and then after a few days becomes the gnat as we recognize it. But the in- sect spoken of in the text. is in its very smallest shape, and it yet inhabits the water, for my text is a misprint and ought to read “strain out a gust. †My text shows you the prince of incon- sistencies. A man after long observation has formed the suspicion that in a cup of water he is about to drink, there is a grub or the grandparent of a gust. He goes and gets a sieve or strainer. He takes the water and pours it through the sieve in the broad light. He says, “I would rather do anything almost than drink this Water until this larva be extirpoted.†This water is brought under inquisition. The experiment is successful. The water rushes through the slave and leaves against the side of the sieve the grub or gnat. Then the man mrefuliy removes the insect and drinks the water in placid- ity. But going out one day, and hungry. he devours a “ship of the desert,†the camel. which the J cws were forbidden to eat. The gastronomer has no compunc- tion of conscience. He suffers from no indigestion. He puts the lower jaw under the camel’s forefoot, and his upper jaw over the hump of the camel’s back, and gives one swallow and the dromcdary disappears forever. He strained out a gnat, he swallowed a. camel. While Christ’s audience was yet smil- ing at the appositcness and wit of his did, unless they were too stupid to understand the said to them “That is you.†Punctilious about small things; reckless about affairs of great magnitude. No subject ever winced under a surgeon’s knife more bitterly than did the Pharisees under Christ’s scalpel of truth. As an anatomist will take a human body to pieces and put the i pieces under a microscope for examine-I tion, so Christ ï¬nds his way to the heart . of the dead Pharisee and cuts it out and T puts it under the glass of inspection for . all generations to examine. Those Phari- sees thought that Christ would flatter 2 them and compliments them, and how I they must have writhed under the redhot 5 words as he said, “Ye fools, ye whitcd sepulchers, ye blind guides. which attain out a gnat and swallow a camel.†I There are in our day a great many l gnats strained out and a. great many ‘ camels swallowed. and it is the object of this sermon to sketch a few persons who . are extensively engaged in that business. First, I remark that all those ministers of the gospel who are very scru uious . about the conventionnlitics of re igion. ‘1 but. put no particular stress upon matters of vast importance, are photographed in the text. Church services ought to be grave and solemn. There is no room for frivollty in religious convocation, but there are illustrations, and there are hyperboles like that of Christ in the text that will irradiate with smiles any in- telligent audience. There are men like those blind guides of the text who advo- cate only those things in religious service which draw the corners of the mouth down and dcnounco' all those things which have a tendency to draw the corn- ers of the mouth up, and these men will : go to installations, and to presbyterie , and to conferences, and to associations, their pockets full of ï¬ne sieves to strain out the gnats, while in their own churches at home every Sunday there are 50 people sound asleep. They make their , churches a great dormitory, and their somniferous sermons area. cradle and the drawled out hymns a lullaby, while some wakeful soul in a pew. with her fan. keeps the flies ofl unconscious persons approximate. Now, I say it is worse to sleep in church than to smile in church, for the latter implies at least attention, 5 While the former implies the indifference of the hearers and the stupidity of the . speaker. In old age, or from physical inï¬rmity, or from long watching with the sick. drowsiness will sometimes overpower one, but. when a minister of the gospel . looks off upon an audience and finds}, healthy and intelligent people struggling I with drowsiness it. is time for him to i give out the doxology or pronounce the . i of peaches steals 60,000 baskets of peaches. benediction. The great fault of church 101111301 36m Weakness. all effects 01 abuse 1 but too much somnoience. The one is an or excess, Mental Worry, Excessive use of To- bacco, Opium or Stimulants. Mailed on receipt of price. one ackage $1. six. $5. One walplease. sustain cure. amphiets free to any address. The Wood Company, Windsor, Only QWood’s Pliospodine is sold in Lindsay by F. int-g (y, Dluflaiel. ..____......_ ___.._.__ â€.- MONEY TO LOAN. I have. made arrangements for phclng an unlimited (gamut; of 1.08.: 5 cu Farm I‘r- party at Fivennd Six er Cent interest. All Loam will be put. through with tn. tr am y Balble delay at d expenses. GEO. TAYLOR, Clerk of Veruiam, Pobceygeon Illâ€"â€E. Tangney, Furniture and Undertaking Charges Moderate Opp. B.â€"uson Home, . Linda irritating gnat that may be easily strain- ed out, the other is a. great, sprawling and sleepy eyed camel of the dry desert. In all our Sabbath schools, in all our Bible classes, in all our pulpits, we need to brighten up our religious message with such Christlikc vivacity as we ï¬nd in the text. I take down from my library the bio- graphies of ministers and writers of the past ages, inspired and uninspired, who have done the most to bring souls to Jesus Christ. and I ï¬nd that. without a single exception, they consecrated their wit and their humor to Christ. Elijah used it when he advised the Baalitee, as they could not make their god respond, to. call louder, as their god might be sound asleep or gone a-hunting. . Job used it when he said to his self-conceited comforters, “Wisdom will die with you." Christ not only used it in the text, but when he ironically complimented the cor- rupt Phariaeg saying. “The whole and not a pity-icon.†and when. in word, he described the cunning of cred, thew Henry’s commentaries from the ï¬rst page to the last corruscated with humor as summer clouds with heat lightning. humor as they are of saving truth, and there is not an aged man here who has ever "read “Pilgrim’s Progress†who does not remember that while readin it he OUT THE GNATS' i smiled as often as he wept. Chryegetom, ; isbehavior George Herbert, Robert South. George 1 m Whiteï¬eld, I the ‘ hear three blocks. will cry out, ' an air which seems to say, one , John Bunyan’s writings are as full of Jeremy Taylor, young theological Sharpen your witeuntil they It is a. very spring morning than in a Religious work with- By all means remove all frivolity out through the discrimination. but, on the Oh, how particular a great many people are about the inï¬nitesimals while they are quite reckless about the magni- tudes! What did Christ say? excoriate the people in his time who were so careful to wash their hands before a meal, but did not wash their hearts? It Did he not is a. bad thing to have unclean hands. It is a worse thing to have an unclean heart. How many people there are in our time who are very anxious that after their death they shall be buried with their faces toward the east and not at all anxious that during their whole life they should face in the right direction, so that they shall come up in the resurrection of the just. whichever way they are buried! How many there are chiefly anxious that a minister of the gospel shall come in the line of apostolic succes- sion, not caring so much whether he comes from Apostle Paul or Apostle Judas! They have a way of measuring a gust until it is larger than a. camel. Again, my subject photographs all those who are abborrant of small ins while they are reckless in regard to magniï¬cent thefts. You will ï¬nd many a merchant ‘who, while he is so careful that he would not take a yard of cloth l or a spool of cotton from the counter without paying for it, and who, if a bank cashier should make a mistake and send in a roll of bills 85 too much, would dispatch a messenger in hot haste to re- turn the surplus. yet who will go into a stock company, in which after awhile he gets control of the stock. and than waters the stock and makes $100,000 appear like $2,000,000. He only stole $100,000 by the operation. Many of the men of fortune made their wealth in that way. One of those men engaged in such un- rigbteous acts that evening, the evening of the very day when he Watered the stock, will ï¬nd a wharf rat stealing a daily paper from the basement doorWay and will go out; and catch the urchin by the collar and twist the collar so tightly poor fellow has no power to say that it was thirst for knowledge that. led him to the dishonest act,- but. grip the collar tighter and tighter, saying: “I have been . looking for you a long while. You stole my paper four or five times, haven‘t you. you miserable wrench?†And then the old stock gambler, with a voice they can “Police, police!†That same man the evening of the day in which he Watered the stock 3 will kneel with his family in prayers and thank God for the prosperity of the day, then kiss his children good night withi “I hope you I 1 all will grow up to be as good as your father.†Prisons for sins inscctiie in size. but palaces for crimes dromcdarinn. ' No mercy for sins animnlculo in propor- tion, but great leniency for mnstodon in- iquity. A poor boy slyly takes from the basket of a market woman a choke pear -â€"snving some one else from the cholera. ' â€"-nud you smother him in the horrible ‘ atmosphere of Raymond Street Jail or New York Tombs. while his cousin, who has been skillful enough to steal $0.000 from the city. you make a candidate for ' the Suite Legislature. There is a good deal of uneasiness and nervousness now among some people in our time who have got unrightcous fortunesâ€"u great deal of ‘unoiisincss about dynamite. I tell them that God will put under their unrighteous fortunes something more explosive than dyna- miteâ€"the earthquake of his omnipotent indignation. It is time that we learn in America that sin is not excusable in proportion as it declares large dividends and has outridcrs in cquipage. Many a man is riding to pcrditiou, postilion ahead and lackey behind. To steal one copy of a newspaper is n guat; to'steal many thousands of dollars is n camel. There is many a. fruit dealer who would not consent to steal a bushel of peaches from a. neighbor’s stall, but who would not scruple to depress the fruit market. and as long as I can remember we have heard every summer the pouch crop of Maryland is n failure, and by the time the crop comes in the misrepresentation makes a difference of millions of dollar. A man who would not steal one basket Go down into the public library, in the reading rooms, and see the news- paper rcports of the crops from all parts of the country, and their phraseology is very much the same, and the some men wrote them, methodically and infamous- ly carryingout the huge lying about the grain crop from year to year and for a score of years. After awhile there will be a “corner†in the wheat market, and men who had a contempt for petty theft will burglarize the wheat bin of a nation and commit larceny upon the American corner-lb. And some of the men will sit in churches and in reformntory institu- tions trying to strain out the small gnate of scoundrelism while in their grain elevators and in their atorehoueee they are fattening huge camels which they expect after awhile to swallow. Society has to be entirely reconstructed on this subject. We are to ï¬nd that a. sin in in- excusable in proportion as it is great, 1 know in our time the tendency is to charge religious frauds upon good men. They say, “Oh, what a. hoot of‘frnude you have in the church of God in this day!" And when an elder of a church. . deacon. or a minister of the gospel. g tamperintendent of e Sabbath school turns out a defaulter. what display heads. , there are in many of the newspaper-i Great primer “Another Saint Absoonded,†" Scoundreliem,†‘.‘ Religion at a. Discount. . “Shame on the Churches.†while there are a church to one inside the church, and the 1 inside of a church 18 '0 Rowland; enough to Hill, Ashael Nettlcton, Charles G. Finnoy Christian a van e ng cm 0 o oonsecra. ‘ s to excuse sin in their wit and their, humor to the causal one, th. tendency i 1310' of Christ. So it has been in all the ages, and I say to all our students, are as keen an scimitcre and than take them into this holy war. short bridge between a smile and a tour, a suspension bridge from eye to lip, and it is soon crossed over. and a smile is sometimes just as sacred as a tear. Thai-e is as much religion. and, I think, a little more in a etarless midnight. out any humor or wit in it. is a banquet with a side of beef, and that raw, and no condiments and no dessert succeeding. People will not. sit down to such a ban- quot. and all pathos and all lightness and vul- garity. Strain them sieve of holy other hand, beware of that monster which overshadowe the Christian church to-day â€"conventionalityâ€"-coming up from the great Sahara desert of ecclesiasticism, having on its back a bump of sanctimon- ions gloom, and vehemently refuse to swallow that camel. gum in hil condemns. Seton, gives such. a grand do- ecription of him you have hard work to withhold your admiration. etrnlning out of small sins like gnatsand this gulping down great iniquitice like camels l of one or two persons. but is a gallery in which thousands of people may see their likenesses. Formstance, all those people who, while they would not rob their neighbors of a far-thing. appropriate the money and the treasure of the public. A man has a house to sell. and he tells his customer it is worth $20,000. Next day the assessor comes around and the owner says it is worth $15,000. The Govern- ment of the United States took off the tax from personal . income, among other reasons because so few people would tell the truth, and many a man with an in- come of hundreds of dollars a day made statements was about to be handed over to the over- seer of the r. . passage fropigio Liverpool to New York, yet smuggling in their Sarntoga trunk ten silk dresses from Paris and a half dozen watches from Geneva. Switzerland, telling the customs house ofï¬cer on the wharf, but wearing apparel.†and putting a ï¬ve dollar gold piece in ate the statement. are particular never to break the law of age Five line pica. 3 I c t Cleflm} thousand mandrel: outside the of those who never see 15110 great that it is tempt a .man. to become a to get out of their company. ‘ it is mammoth. Even John rtion as “Paradieemost.†while be Oh, this The subject does not give the picture which seemed to imply he Careful to pay their “There is nothing in that trunk his hand to punctu- Describcd in the text are all those who grammar and who want all their langu- an elegant specimen of syntax. straining out all the inaccuracies of speech with a ï¬ne sieve of literary criti- cism, while through their conversation go slander and innuendo and profanity and falsehood larger than a hole caravan of camels, when they might better fracâ€" ture every law of the language and shock their intellectual taste, and better let every verb seek in vain for its nomina- tive, and every noun for its government, and let every proposition lose its Way in the sentence, and adjectives and partici- ples and pronouns get into a grand riot worthy of the Fourth Ward of New York on election day. than to commit a moral inaccuracy. Better swallow a thousand gnnts than one camel. ' Such persons are also described in the text who are very much alarmed about the small faults of others and have no alarm about their own great transgres- sions. There are in every community and in every church watchdogs who feel called upon to keep their eyes on others and growl. They are full of suSpicions. They wonder if this man is not. dishonest. if that man is not unclean, if there is not. something wrong about the other man. They are always the ï¬rst to hear of any- thing wrong. Vultures are aIWuys the ï¬rst to smell carrion. They are self- appoint-ed detectives. I lay this down as a rule Without any exception, that those people who have the most faults them- selves are more merciless in their watch- ing of others. From scalp of head to sole of foot they are full of jealousics and hypercriticisms. They spend their life in hunting for muskrats and mud turtles instead of hunting for Rocky Mountain eagles, always for something mean in- stead of something grand. They look at their neighbors’ imperfections through a miscroscopc and look at their own im- perfections through a telescope upside down. Twenty faults of their own do not hurt them so much as one fault of somebody else. Their neighbors’ imper- fections are like goats. and they strain them out; their own imperfections are like camels, and they swallow them. But lost too runny think they escape the scrutiny of the text, I have to tell ycu that we all come under the divine satire when we make the questions of time more prominent than the questions of eternity. Come now, let us all go into the confessional. Are not; all tempted to make the question, Where shall I live now? urtntcr than the question. Where shall I live forever? How shall I get more dollars here? greater than the ques- tion, How shall I lay up treasures in heaven? the question, How shall I pay my debts to man? greater than the ques- tion. How shall I 'meet my obligations to God? the question, How shall I gain the world? greater than the question, What if I lose my soul? the question, Why did God let sin come info the world? greater than the question, How shall I got it extirputed from my nature? the question, What shall I do with the 20 or 40 or 70 years of my sub-lunar existence? greater than the question. What shall I do with the million of cycles of my post terrestrial existence? Timeâ€"bow small it is! Eternityâ€"bow vast it is! The former more insigniï¬cant in comparison with the latter than n. gnnt is insigniï¬cant when compared with a camel. We dodged the text. We said, “That does not; mean me, and that does not mean me,†and with a ruinous benevolence wcure giving the whole sermon uwzzy. But let us all surrender to the charge. What an ado about things here! What poor preparation for a great eternity! As though a minnow were larger than a behemoth, as though a swallow took wider circuit than an nl batross. as though a nettle were taller than :1 Lebanon cedar. as though a gust were greater than a camel, as though a minute were longer than a century, as though time were higher, deeper, broader than etern- ity. So the text which flashed with light.- iug of wit as Christ uttered it is follow- ed by the crashing thunders of awful catastrophe to those who make the ques- ticns 0f time greater than the’ questions 01 the fut“Nil. the oncoming, over- shadowing futurc. 0h! Eternity! Etern- ity! Eternity! ' ‘ \Yindow Wrecking No Bur. Can a lawyer practicing at the bar be at the some time a manual worker? This question is now agitating the members of the legal profession in Hungary. A young brieï¬ess barrister, tired of waiting for clientl, took to earning money by painting, dooorating,‘ window-cleaning. and so forth, in the provincial towns in I the district in which he practiced at the i bar. ‘ An efl’ort Wan made to have-hie name erased from the roll, of advocates, but the‘lpl‘dnhlaf justice ruled that the younz 10381.1'9'01ilt1911185 me within his "'~ " ~-~» .. .-â€"--â€".. . I _..._... . »~ .~........_,.. -~. : ‘ 1.. Agent C.P.R. - June 24â€"Lindsay Collegiate Institute, to Laidiaw 3, July 6 Church of England S.S., Lindsay, to Pleas. July 12-Preutice 8.)! 3, True Blues and Orangemeu, ther notice : I AiJIIeturn I-‘are: 8 " ï¬gmmpointsin Ontario eon. - , ESTEVAII‘ ..... 60-Dau Wadi}; . Excursions -.°°"' ':.::;'.::: To W) ï¬lttimo Ganaolan super} 535 North w 513 lillim::...l$40 - ' Sept. re (All Rail or 8.8. Athena-co) :7 (All m or 60 Kent-st. , Lindsay -_-__.__.. THE STEAMER . ALICE- . ~“L.'£ .3- g m-nw; : exciiRsIONs Leidlew’s to B )bcaygeun. lune 23-0.0.0. F. and Farmers. Janetvllio Valentin, Plum Point and McGil-is to Lindsay: 9 Balsam Lake July l-E B. A., Lindsay. to Crowley ’s IsYand. luly 5 Presbyterian S S., Dunsford, to T. V. Canal, Laidlaw’e. out Pomt. July 7â€"Preebytcrian 8.8., Lindsay to Pleasant Pt. July 8â€"Methndiet S.S., Dunsfor , to Chemong or Port Perry. Lindsay to Feneion Fahs. J. M. KNOWLSON LINDSAY FM “Kiorwatlia Lakes†. . ‘lwwv‘x‘ THE FAST STEAMER “MAPLE LEAFâ€i Commencing THURSDAY, MAY nth, ; w:ll run on the following time-table until fur- ! College of Dental 3 0’0““ [3mm mothodendoptedï¬gg A“ the “"4 MLâ€"ï¬. Honor Mum of .1. modem , . Oï¬co our Anderson Eugen“ 7‘ ’ “M V ormusr, . "In: 0, Graduate of Toronto Univem A! * I of Dental Surgeon. til" and R°hi [cl ,/ and scientiï¬c manner 3 . over Margin" Drug gmreffllgduau M .. College of Dent-ti gamma?†â€mar-it, or , Successfully performed Ch over Gregory's Sic we†“Went. strodeâ€"8141M "' mm" ‘ ETHEL DR. NEELAEDS . - Extracts teeth without min by 6“ (Vi . lune 22â€"North Victoria Agricultural SOClety, from administered by him for 26 year: wi He studied the gas under Dr Como the originator of gas for extractgu teeth writes Dr. Neelonde that he ha. 186,417 persons without an accident use! the best local pain obtnnderr. ncial teeth inserted at moderate pn epoetaloard before coming. 05% '1le the Simpson House, Lindsay. ' “ DR. ARTH UR DAY successor: to THE LATE on University . College. scientiï¬c manner. I Crown and Bridge Work a seem-q. Ii; Charges moderate I .! Cambridzeaete. Telephone 5-. g R. jEFFElES.’ streak . r‘ vuv ' . to Gel and Surgeon : ‘J T. L '. District. t {ï¬es hours 10:0 2‘7 '- -. ' -' ' V i ‘15.: f graduate of Tr nit} C ~ii'wrsiti'. ' .1, oF-C if of C liege of P'l}'i1C1'il! 3'11 r ." ':..' Leave COBOCONK ................ 6.40 . - . 3 “ FENELON FALLS............S.45 “ l " S'I‘UBGEON POINT.........9.15 “ Arrive LIVDSAY (new wharf). . . ..10.3O †= Leave LINDS RY .................. 3 00 p.111. Arvivc STURGEON POINT ........ 4 15 " I “ FENELON FALLS ........ 4.45 “ - “ COBOCONK ................ 6,30 “ scusnuu or FARES = ! Single Return . Cnbocoukto Lindsay 70c 8'. OOI Cohocmlr to Feneiou Falls ........... 33c 50c , Roerdale to Pension Falls. . . . . . . . . ‘30: Sudan Falls to Sturgeon Point ...... 25c F‘eneioa Fake to Lindsay .......... 35c 50c S’earner will call at any landing when Blunalled. Freight and parcels carried at low rates Favorabfe fer-nu f-r small excursion parties to any point on I route. For further information apply to CAPT. J. D. VARCOE, owuea, LINDSAY 9.0. “Korwatha Laler’ SEASON OF 1899. THE Trent llall y (LIMITED) DOU BLE TRIPS On and after THURSDAY. IUNE xst, the ESTURION â€"PLYING BETWEENâ€" Bobcaygeon, Lindsay and Stur- S geon Point will‘run Double Trips as follows : -- Leave Bnbonygeon at ..... 6.15 a.m., 3.10 p.m. Arrue ht ..indsey at ..... 8.30 a m., 5 30 pm, RKTL'RNIKG WILL Leave Lindsay at ....... 11.20 sun. 5 45 p.111. unve at Bobcaygeon at. 1.35 p.111 . 800 pm. Sturgeon Point. Single Fare, 350. Return “ 50c. Bobcaygeon, Single “ 75c. “ Return “ $1.00 GRAIN CAR RYI NG.â€"Arramrements can be made With the Captain for calling at any point on the Lake for grain. J. w. DIAMENT, Capt, Lo. 8. c. or Q. STEAMBPAT co, (Limited Cobourg, Port Hape an :~‘ 5‘: :E‘ "L‘ ‘ T. A~ o h ' 3.." «no i.» TAKING EFFECT Ist OF MAY SOUTH BOUND Leave Port Ilope ........ . . . ..... 2. in. . ‘_‘ Cobourz ................. Lg: p.“ Arrive Charlotte .............. . . . .7. l 5 “ “ Rochester (N.Y.C.) ........ 7.45 “ . NORTH BOUND. Leave Ror hostel (N.Y.C.). ....... .8.2o a.ru. â€" ‘f Charlotte .......... . .‘ ...... .8 so " Arrive chourg .................. 1.20 p m. “ Port Hope. . . . ............. z 05 “ Right reserved to change-time without notice i l i. i l v a l l i v I l l I I i i i i BEG “WEI. Agent. Lindsay late in earnin‘ ' ‘ °- .13 193933}..- â€him," “that?†mâ€" u. 1i. GiLnE-ittsmevn, Wham DR. A. E. VROO.\1.-1.,\‘_.ji Spin. ResideanIZJWeljzrw err-e: " , 50. 43. ' ‘ - Ofï¬ce Swath-evil c .r'ier Lillis .r .1." - -~ ‘ :- Telephone 107 -â€"23 15'. iM Barristers. S I:c;: r-. it. â€:1“ Every department of dentistry domin‘ DENTIST. - Honor Graduate of To: All the latest and improved branches or... Kent.“ w, - DENTIST, . UNDs‘ Y th (ya: 7". I n. of 1;" . m‘ I-h live: m, k _ Beam“ cue. p1“ ‘ . E" 0'. an. . 7 "’33.: . .ng {#5 2' g. :4; DENTIST m Member of Toronto Delta: Cguert 1.“. Also graduate of America; . s Most Moieru Dentistry practised g the 5, 0( I OFFICEâ€"96 Kent 8 illtpsiriaits and residence ' 79' . . - “(l .[,.¢~‘:~ 1, at? V“ ‘-‘v_.~r, DR. WHITE. GRA DEATH of Toronto Cniierstt. ~‘ lT-a For" .- ..:5;__ R. A GILLESME, CAI} S.O. O’hce and re~édr263e F‘ true†31 " l and Russell streets Lie-en ire .: :22» a {m 1 Hr} cleans and >urze us, l2 .1 t ".1 . Latin: : :Midwifer), Edinbnr h Stet-is 2.:2- 1.: cw a ' \i dw (cry and dLeeasee of was rm» >_.â€"~ 93.â€"â€"35. DR. 81 MPSON, matszcza Ofï¬ce a d TCnitlL‘YZCC. 'rL'; w --" end door west of i ork-s (lire: 23:1 r.‘ 10 81) a m.; 1.30 pm :3 um. . .; ' :75 ..r. J. SIM‘SON', graduate. of L -{ Trix? Toronto Media C vlzege of P .w: ~;. ,~ 1.1.351... Ont. Late of Hock" noi 9.9.311. :x'. 3:; . Truek Summon, Lindsay lug; '. 35:}: Fe ary, 4th, 1531. .â€"-â€" ï¬atristtrs. {\i. U. H. HOPKiNr. Barns ' SOl'CitOf {'1' Int (“16. 1:.) .5 MG†Loan at Lowes: it tes. 076;: .‘~' r. “p.22: . south. G. ti. HOPKINS. P. DEVLIN. iiiRRIST ' ' Solicitor, etc, L‘ 1:“ (-12:33; Clerk of the Pace liaise}; mix. '5 G Block, foot of Ken: ~treet- cswerx .- meets“. rely op.~osite th. llaiy ii as '2‘. .. 5'. e: JOHN MC‘WEYX .! 2; “ TE“; ART Ck Barristers. Satan-vs, r Rank, Kent-51., Linda-1). lowest ntcs T.STEWART. l. \ ukN‘Y-VOR 3‘ . x... .._.__â€"â€"--r _. .-, A. C" CLUXNC‘ ‘7EXNY \\ £1,130}; B- IX RISTERS, m ‘ Hauiiimu's Bi-ck. TO LOAN at very Lewis liq». H. J. KENNY 1.5 MOORE . nan-rs, etc. Sch ".1. .. _ . Vicroria and the Bank t»! 5!: '1'. Â¥_“‘- on mort. ages at lowest c::"‘x' "~55 Wi‘linmetq Linden) . F.D.HIV'RE i .. _ ...w' .7.- .‘k‘lJil' '3 Kw L51. :sa.‘ HERSOhâ€"d lï¬ 1V CLAUGHLIX s 31ch- Mlll. Barnum? .‘i‘...".i.'., h“. and Feuemn Fields. Lr‘id'm; ‘ -D an!" Kent-ct, We an ll.Rlill.L l * tat-"s montage in surn~ inn." ...i.‘ q. ' â€..:iï¬l“ on the best urine uni at t - ‘2 men“. interest. We‘ic'n'H !‘ " " ‘ ‘ ., - . v . ' L fl “CDIM R. J. MCL‘L‘JH I} Atitiioiittts \. , â€"â€" .7 V g' a" PETER BROWN. inc-:3; Onkwood PAL, misr .l‘il'l‘cm‘rga ,-= other Mics prompt.) arm-mint ~.«' (THE W I crate. Sales can be arrztnzu'. far 8 HAN ‘Omce. ‘ ‘ :i \' IQ 5A. THOMAs sum... 14,33, ticneer, Caesa on Y Us†“:1“ 0i i. . conducted in on part of tlzt‘ , \fmnediï¬â€œ ,. I8 reamnablv as in my ““9335 1 borhood. Experieitccd in alt ‘ly also“ I? and stock mice. Termelrt-aH03»h-l;fm‘*fl .. conduct sales of all kmzis 1*†A. 17.â€. Correspondence answered prime .- “ ï¬ve per cent., on Town Properly. . Terms to suit borrovcfl- - ‘" McSWEYN