H?) ‘Ahn z‘-“~"‘Unt'\f" 'flmOC In“! Wuuu nuugnvvui uuu-v'v my... â€ms-dent Secretary FARMERS This is your own County Company. Farm y, Comtry Schools and Churches only at: insured by this Company. ' Blanket Policies are issued. The rates are lower than those of any other Company in the County. For particulrs apply to On town and farm property at'current rates interest. Costs moderate, and no delay. farmers’ July... Weddinos Debentures issued for periods of from one to ï¬ve yeazs for sums of $100 and upwards. Interest coupons attached. payable hatf-ycaxly at 4 per cent. Deposits of $1.00 and upward taken, with- drawa'ole at any time, upon which current rates of intc‘cst ml be allow-ed. Incorporated under Cap.1 Head Ofï¬ce, LINDSAY, 39 prepared to furnish ‘he peon‘e of Lindsay and sur- Ioundiug cmmtry with MUNU HEN TS and HEAD- Sl‘ONl-Ja', bmh Marble and Granite. Lindsay Mflihlï¬ ka3 # ROBT. CHAMBERS v' a- .- ï¬arble 'I able Teps, Wash Tops, Eantle Pieces, etc., nspecialty, king :1 nautical workman, all 9’10qu see bra designs and compare priCes before purchasing else- where WORKS â€"In the rear of the Market. on ‘Canbtidge- st†Opposite the packing house. ROBT CHAMBERS The Great English Remedy. Sold and recommended by an druggista in Canals. Onl reli. ablecaggdicine (2633mm)? . 851a}: gum-an tocnrea isms of Sexual Weakness. all effects of abuse orexcess, Mental Worry. Excessive use of To- ‘bucco, Opium or Stimulants. Mailed on i’eceilfl3 otprlce. one ackatze 81. six. $5. One mm of: will cure. xl’amphlets tree to angaddress. The Wood Company, W dsor, Ont. aWood’s Phospadine is sold in Lindsay by .8. Gregory, Dn ggist. luskoka Tourist Season .10 xpress Oï¬ice. Lindsay, 0111:. SAVINGS COMPANY Beautiful Wed= ding Rings Sa‘flngs Department SECRETARY AND AGENT NC. 8 William Street. Lindsay. G. Corned, Wedding Presents ners’ Union Mutual Fire Insurance Gompanu. when you insure patronize .tes promptty given on 311 kinds of cemetery Solid Gold, without a Joint. Stamped W. F. M. Guaranteed the ï¬nest made. in endless variety. Moderate prices. Bring your Repairing to The Ieweller, 77 Kent Street, West Side. Return Txckete from now am“ Smw flws next fall at FARE AND THIRD Call an Express Oï¬ic» fur yuur tickem. Cheaper ’1“â€_"‘_," ever to Rochester Via North King. . MOON-W f Wood’s Phosphodina, GEO. WILDER . 169, the 1Wnou Au vuv -, . v-. __ TWO modes of divination by which the King of Babylon proposed to ï¬nd out the will of God. He took a bundle of arrows, put them together, miXed them up, then pulled forth one and by the in- scription on it decided What city he should ï¬rst assault. Then an animal 3 was slain, and by the lighter or darker color of the liver the brighter or darker prospect of success Was inferred. That is . the meaning of the text. “He made his- arrows bright, be consulted with images. he looked in the liver.†Stupid delusion! : And yet all the ages have been ï¬lled with ‘ delusions. It seems as if the world loves I to be hoodwinked, the delusion of the 5 text only a specimen of a vast number . of deceits practiced upon the human race. In the latter part of the last century Johanna Southcote came forth pretend- ing to have divine power, made prophe- cies. had chapels built in her honor, and 100.000 disciples came forward to follow 3 her. About ï¬ve years before the birth or ’ Christ Apollonius was born. and he came ' forth, and after ï¬ve years being speech- less. acoording to the tradition. he healed the sick and raised the dead and preach- 5 ed virtue and. according to the myth, ~ having deceased, was brought toresurrec- l BEGEIVED MILLIONS. Washington, Aug. 6.â€"â€"Rev. Dr. Tal- mage took for his text this morning Ezekiel xxi, 21. “He made his arrows bright. be consulted with images, he looked in the liver. †He said: 1 5,1. LL- YET IT ENCIRCLES THE EARTH. Tho Transformation of So Many Great mind: by tho Sc-Called Ehllucinstlon at the Christian Religion Must 30 Taken as an Evidence of It. Truth-â€" Decoits of the Ancients. The Delphic oracle deceived vast multi- ? tudes of people: the Pythoneas, seated in i the temple of Apollo. uttering a crazy i jargon from which the people guessed ; their individual or national fortunes or I misfortunes. The utterances were of such L cs Datum: “sub you 1101le read them any ‘ way you wanted to read them. A general ,,,‘L.J LLA REV. DR. TALMAGE ON THE GLORIOUS DELUSiON OF CHRISTIANITY. tion. .-.â€"J ,. ,, 7 Ant. 1")" fhr‘4‘ +0 EV“- ft‘e cnflï¬v'tnfl the Delphie oracle, and he Wanted to ï¬nd _ out whether he Was going to be safe in the bottle or killed in battle, and the answer- came forth from the ‘Delphic oracle in such words that if you put the comma before the word “never†it means one thing and if you put the comma. after the word “never" it means another I thing just opposite. The message fromi the Delphic orecle to the general was, ’ “Go forth, return never in battle shalt thou perish.†If he was killed. that was . accordmg to the Delphie oracle; if heg came home safely. that was according to 5 the Delphie oracle. - e ‘1‘ the crimes century 1 as to WI: written. - will say “Paradise believed Benjamin delusion; ter that h ging him in menu: type, and days, “U to say the any} tho 1-: So the ancient auguries deceived the people. rl'he priests of those auguries, by the flight of birds or by the intonation of thunder or by the inside appearance of slain animals, told the fortunes or mis- fortunes of indinduals or nations. The sibyls deceived the people. The sibyls Were supposed to be inspired women who lived 1n caves and who wrote the sxhyl- line booze afterward purchased by Tar- quin the Proud. So late as the year 1829 a man arose in New York, pretending to be a divine being, and played his part so well that wealthy merchants became his disciples and threw their fortunes into his keeping. And so in all ages there have been necromanoies, incantations. witchcrafts. sorceries, magical arts. enâ€" chantments. divinations and delusions. The one of the text was only a specimen of that which has been occurring in all ages of the world. None of these delu- sions accomplished any good. They de- ceived, they panperized the people. they were as cruel as they were absurd. They opened no hospitals, they healed no wounds. they wiped away no tears, they emancipated no serfdom But' .there are those who say that all these delusions combined are as nothing com‘nared with the delusion now abroad in the world. the delusion of the Christ- ian religion. That delusion has to day 400.000 000 dupes. It proposes to encircle the earth With its girdle. That which has been called a delusion has already overshadowed the Appalachian range on this Side the sea, and it has overshadowed the Balkan and Canon sion ranges on the other side the sea. It has conquered Eng~ land and the United States. This cham- pion delusion, this hoax, this swindle of the ages. as it has been called, has gone forth to conquer the islands of the Pacific, and. Melanesia and Micronesia and Malayan Polynesia have already sur- rendered to the delusion. Yea. it has con- quered the Indian Archipelago and Borneo, and Sumatra and Celebes and Java have fallen under its wiles. In the Fiji Islands. where there are 120.000 people. 102,000 have already become the dupes of this Christian religion. and if things go on as they are now going on and if the influence of this great hallu‘ cination of the ages cannot be stopped, it will swallow the globe. Supposing~ then that Christianity is the delusion of the centuries. as some have pronounced it, I propose to show you what has been ao- compllshed by this chimera, this fallacy, 1 this hoax. this swindle of the ages And in the ï¬rst place I remark that this delusion of the Christian religion has made wonderful transformation of human character. I will go down the aisle of any church in Christendom, and I will find on either side that isle those who were once profligate. profane, un- clean of speech and unclean of action. drunken and lost. But by the power of this delusion of the Christian religion they have been completely transformed and now they are kind and, amiable and genial and lovmg and useful. Everybody sees the change. Under the power of this great hallucination they have quit their former associates, and whereas they once found their chief delight among those who gambled and swore and raced horses. now they ï¬nd their chief joy among those who go to prayer meetings and churches. so complete is the delu- sion. Yea. their own families have notic- ed itâ€"the wife has noticed it, the child‘ ren have noticed it. The money that went for rum now goes for books and for clothes and for education. He is a new man. All who know him say there has been a wonderful ..change. What is the cause of this change? This great halluci? nation of the Christian religion There is as much difference between .what he is new and what he once Was as between a rose and a nettle. as between a dove and a vulture, as between day and night. I Tremendous delusion! ' a» Admiral Farragut. one of the most; ad- min“ man of the American navy, early Another captive of this great Christian delusion. There goes Soul of Trauma on horseback at full gallop. Where is he going? To destroy Christians. He Wants no better play spell than to stand and watcn the hats and coats of the murder- f ers who are massacring God’s children. ' There goes the same man. This time he ‘ is afoot. Where is he going now? Going ? on the road to Ostia to die for Christ. .' ‘Ihey tried to whip it out of him, they 5 t scare it out of him, they tried to thought they would give him enough of 3 it by putting him into a windowless ‘ dungeon, and keeping him on small diet, e and condemning him as a criminal. and : denying him a cloak. and howling at him through the street, but they could‘ not sweat it out of him, and they could i 9‘1 unsus- save it. to help it, tolling until they dropped into their graves, dying with no earthly comfort about them and going into graves with no appropriate epitaph When thev might have lived in this coun- try and 'lived for themselves and lived luxuriously and been at last put into brilliant sepulchers. What a delusion! Yea, this delusion of the Christian re- ligion shows itself in the fact that it goes 0 those who are in trouble. Now, it is bad enough to cheat a man when he is well and when he is prosperous: but this religion comes to a man when he is sick and says: “You will be well again after awhile; you are going into a land where there are no coughs and no pleurisies and no consumptions and no languish- ing; take courage and bear up †Yea, not pound it out of him. so they tried ; this awful chimera of the gospel comes the surgery of the sword. and one sum- mer day in (56 he was decapitatedâ€"pen 5 hops the mightiest intellect of the 6,000 years of the world’s existence hoodwinkâ€" ed. cajolcd, duped by the Christian rcli- ‘ gion. . A L Lil‘s. : .. LLA -nunnulvnlxln thine! ahnw‘: I to the poor, and it says to them, “You are on your Way to vast estates and to , (iidtiends always licclarable.†'l‘his delusion of Christianity comes to I ' the bcrcft, and it talks of reunion before ‘ ‘ the throne and of the CCSï¬iitlon of all snn- ( w... “Paradise Lost?" One of the fools who ? believed in the Bible, John Milton. , Benjamin Franklin surrendered to this delusion; if you may judge from the let- ter that he wrote to Thomas Paine beg- ; ging him to destroy the “Age of Reason†: in manuscript and never let it go intof type, and writing afterward in his old .2 days, “Of this Jesus of Nazareth I have ‘ to say that the system of morals he left , say? “The only true and perfect religion and the religion he has given us are the best things the world has ever seen or is ‘ likely to see;" Patrick Henry. the elec- tric champion of liberty, enslaved by . this delusion. so that he says, “The book ‘ worth all other books put together is the Bible.†Benjamin Rush. the leading ' physiologist and anatomist of his day.§ the great medical scientist, what did he is Christianity.†Isaac Newton. the leading philosopher of his time. what did he say? That man, surrendering to this ' , delusion of the Christian religion. crying ‘ out. “The sublixnes: philosophy on earth is the philosophy of the gospel.†David i Brewster, at the pronunciation of whose ‘ ' name every scientist the world over un~ I covers his head, David Brewster saying. ‘ “Oh. this religion has been a great light to me, a very great light all my days." i President 'l'hiers. the great French states- a man. acknowledging that he prayed when he said, “I invoke the Lord God. in whom I am glad to believe.†David ! Livingstone, able to conquer the lion, I able to conquer the panther, able to com I quer the savage, W‘t conquered by this ‘ delusion, this hallucination, this great 3 swindle of the ages. so' when they find 4 him dead they iind him on his knees? William E. Gladstone, the strongest intel- ‘ lect in England, unable to resist this chimera, this fallacy. this delusion of the Christian religion, went to the house of God every Sabbath and often at the invitation of the rector read the prayers to the people. If those mighty intellects are overborne oy this delusion, what chance is there for you and for me? “lily belief in the Bible has saved me in i riot: my literary and moral lite.†Rousseau, ; 0 one of the most eloquent champions of “Vb" infidelity, Spending his. whole ii‘e War- 3 WW] ring against Christianity. cries out “The ' put majesty of the Scriptures amams me.“ ‘delr Alteiuout, the notorious infldel,onc would put- thinl: he would have been safe against , 102 this delusion of the Christian religion. 510-0 Oh no! After talking against Christian- :atht ity all his days in his last hourshe cried l and out “Oh thou blasphemed but most in- give dulgent Lord God hell itself is a refuge if it hide me from thy frown.†Voltaire. the most talented inï¬del the world ever saw, writing 250 publications and the T most of them spiteful against Christian- atti ity, himself the most notorious libertine E1“ of the century. one Would have thought you he could have been depended upon for be‘ steadfastness in the advocacy of inï¬delity nev and in the war against this terrible 3h†chimera, this delusion of the Gospel. But tun no. In his last hour he asks for Christian 1’0 burial and asks that they give him the °f ‘ sacrament of the Lord Jesus Christ. Why ina: you cannot depend upon these ï¬rst rate 0063 inï¬dels; you cannot depend upon their t1" power to resist this great delusion of oat , Christianity. Thomas Paine, the god or 1M“ . modern sceptics. his birthday celebrated fan , in New York and Boston with great en- 1““ , thusiasmâ€"Thomas Paine, the paragon of 1 Bible haters; Thomas Paine. about whom . his brother inï¬del, William Carver, , wrote in a letter which I have at my home, saying that he drank a quart of ma rum a day and was too mean and too On! dishonest to pay for it; Thomas Paine, the adored of modern inï¬delity: Thomas half Paine. who stole another man’s wife in me England and brought her to this country; aw: Thomas Paine, who was so squalid and Off so loathsome and so drunken. and so wrofligate, and so beastly in his habits,†s sometimes picked out of the ditch. some- .1 8 times too ï¬lthy tobe picked out: Thomas 021‘â€er I a Paine, one would have thought that he :21; 3 could have been depended on for stead- eta hotness against this great delusion. nï¬n 3n became a victim of this Christian delu- sion. and,seated not long before his death- at Long Branch. he was giving some friends an account of his early life. He said: “My father went down in behall iii-the United States Government to put an end to Aaron Burr’s rebellion. I .Was a cabin boy and went along with him. I could swear like an old salt. I could gamble in every style of gambling. I knew all the wickedness there was at that time abroad. One day my father cleared evervbodv out of the cabin except myself and locked the door. He said: ‘David, what are vou going to do? What are you going to be?’ ‘Well,’ I said, ‘father, I am going to follow the sea.’ ‘Follow the sea and be a poor, miserable, drunken sailor, kicked and cuffed about the world and die of a fever in a foreign hospital!’ ‘Oh, no,’ I said. ‘Father, I will not be that. I will tread the quarter deck and command as you do.’ ‘No. David,’ my father said. ‘No. David. A person that has your principles and your bad habits will never tread the quarter- deck or command.’ My father went out and shut the door after him, and I said to him: ‘I will change. I will never SWcar again. I will never drink again. I will never gamble again. and, gentlemen, by the help of God, I have kept those three vows to this time I soon aftei- that became a Christian, and that decided my fate for time and for eternity." {zips â€tile mightiest; intelleccï¬of the 6,000 years of the world’s existence hoodwink- ed. cajolcd, duped by the Christian reli- gion. - u. A“ 1,A,,A Ah, that is the remarkable thing about this delusion of Uhrisrdzmity; it over- pOWors the strongest intellects. Gather the critics, secular and religious. of this century together and put a vote to them as to which. is the greatest book ever written. and by a large majority they will say “Paradise Lost.†Who wrote Besides that, I have noticed that ï¬rst rate infldels cannot be depended on for steadtastness in the proclamation of their sentiments. Goethe, a leading sceptic, was so Wrought upon by this Christian- ity that in a weak moment he cried out. But no.7 In his dying hour he begs the Lord Jesus Christ for mercy“. Powerful delusion, all conquering delusion, earth- THE WATCHMAMWARRDE: LINDSAY. UNI i the brrcft, and it talks of reunion before _the throne and of the cessation of all sorrow, and then. to show than) this de- lusion will stop at absolutely nothing, it goes to the dying b .1 and £12.. 1‘...- man with anticipations. How much better it ; Would be to have him die without any ‘more hope than swine and rats and snakes! Shovel him under. That is all. ; Nothing more left of him. He will never , know anything again. Shovel him under' The soul is only a superior part of the body. and when the body disintegratee the soul disintegrates. Annihilation, Ivacancy. everlasting blank. obliteration. l'Why not present all that beautiful doo- ' trine to the dying instead of coming with this hoax, thli swindle of the Christian religion. and ï¬lling the dying man with :inticipzstions of another life ! And to show the immensity of this delusion, this awful swindle of the gospel of Jesus Christ, I open a hospital and I bring into that hospital the death beds i of a great many Christian people. and I ! take you by the hand and I walk up and down the wards of that hospital and I ’33}: a few questions. I ask. “Dying | Stephen, what have you to say 9" “Lord, Jesus. receive my spirit. " “Dying John 1 Wesley,what have you to say!†"1 be best ‘ of all is. God is with us.‘ 1 Edward Payson. what have you to say?" “I float in a sea of glory.' iBrndford. what have. you to sayf" this.†“Dying Dr. Thomas Scott. what have you to any?" “This is hem-on begun. " ‘ Dying soldiur in the last war. ; what have you to u} r" “Bovs. I am i gomg to the front †“Dying Paul what “I am now ready to 2 have you to my?" be ofl'ered. and the time of my departure is at hand; I have fought the good: ï¬ght I have ï¬nished my course. I haveé kept the faith. 0 death, where 14 thyi sting? O grave, where is thy victoryii '1 banks he unto God who givcth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ‘ , ,,A n_j __L_4. A “1 1...:.. " “Dying John . “If i there be any Way of coing to heaven on ; _horscl: bark or in a fiery chariot it is. ruuu‘. run nu out CAPT J. D. VARCOE, ownsn unosu P. o. ‘Kawartha Lakes†SEASON OF 1899. tulv- m.â€" “Dying 1 THE T111111 Yalley Navigation (30. (LIMITED) DOU BLE TRIPS On and after THURSDAY. JUNE (st, the ESTURION â€"PLY1.\'G BETWEENâ€" Bobcaygeon. Lindsay and Stur- ; O toy Lord. my God. what a delusion, what a glorious delusion! Submerge me l With it. 1111 my eyes and ours with in, ‘ put it undur my head for n pillow. this , delusion; spread it over me for a canopy. ' put-it underneath me for an outspread- ' in: wing, roll it over me in ocean surges I 10.000 futhoms. deep. 11' inï¬delity and if gathcism and if annihilation are a reality land the Chrisslan religion 13.3 delusion I give me the delusion. until some in the lat hour have clapped their hands. and some have shouted. and some have sung. and some have been so overwrought with joy that they could only look ecstatic? Palace gates opening, they thought-diamond coronets unsh- ing, hands beckoning. orchestras sound- lng. Little children dying actually be- lieving they saw their departed parents, so that. although the little children had been so weak and feeble and sick for weeks they could not turn on their dying pillow, at the last. in a paroxysm of rapture uncontrollable, thay sprang to their feet and shouted: “Mother, catch me! I am coming!†The Sultan of Turkey is always seen attired in pale brown garmentsr the Emperor of Austria affects gray. The young German Emperor has what may be called a loud taste in clothes. and is never so happy as when wearing the showiest of uniforms or hunting oos- tumes; indeed. when attired in the latter he looks as though he had stepped out of a Drury Lane pantomime, so extraord- inary and fantastic: is his get-up on these ooqasions The Emperor of Russia, on the other hand. likes the simplest, dark- est form of undress uniform. and he habitually wears that which became so familiar in all the photographs of his late father. The stomach of a?! ostrich isvoften mode the receptacle for strange things. One of these birds mysteriously died at a California farm. and 8 post-mortar!) Was held. It; had followed about: a gang of men who were building wire fences, and swallowed the bits of Wire they chi off from time to time. PP“! The exwesson of “Hobson’s choice†is said to be derived from the peculiar rule enforced by an eccentric English livery stable keeper named Hobson. His horses stood in a long row, and each customer, in turn, was obliged ï¬r take the home .-' {kn dmr. "W23: $3.11 Ilunz._l_., choice. ’ ’ “‘hut Crowm-d Houd- Wear. Olt'rlch At. Barbod Wire. lihe door. “121% “a: “36%;; "4 Robson’s Choice. â€mm.“ “ in Ontario, Tron-onto sud West. AUGUST 22 East. of l‘nwnbo, WANTED noun-was: FARM LABDBER’S’ EXCUR’SIOflS mu 3: mm AUGUST 24-â€COWAN.......... {wen 'a. certiï¬cate, which Every {mussel ger will be 5 tinmediately on arr; val n ust be Oep( slud with Agen . at nation where pauenger timally lava the trgm Pw' idimr amdxticns of certiï¬cate are complied With, and on surrender (f same properly ï¬lled out 3nd signed and (D u} mmt of $18, the ongilm hold»: will receive a. ticket. back to tuningwiuf. Eastbound journey must. be con meuced on or before Km embcr 22, 1899. Choice of routes t-All Rail via North Bay; or Lake and Rail via Owen Sound. Snap-over will be hUOWed a Winnipeg and paints bmond. Special train leaves Toronto at 1.30 pm. A112. 22 and 24, we North 85‘. Through Colonial Sleepers will be run Toronto {:0 Wirnlpeg. _...‘L‘..L .‘cv:n~mï¬;- “’1“ U6 Jun L'uvnw uv n Ask your nearest. Agenlsnigxrfpaa'm phlet giving pani- cums. T. G. Matcnett, Agent 60 Kent-st . Lindsay, Ont. on reasonable terms during the season of ’99. This staunch steamer is now ï¬tted with a hurricane deck and canvas awning on both decks and by recent improvements in machin- ery she will travel faster than ,ever. Her curving capacity is about 200 passengers, or when accompanied by the Excirrsion Barge (Wthh is now in ï¬rst-class condition and is .ai o providcd with a canvas awning) has 0-- ALICE- ETHEL EXCURSIONS F, - I . :1 cipacny of about 750 to 800 passengers Write eaxlv {or terms and dates to Cnmmcncing THURSDAY. MAY mh. w]! run on the followmg lime-table until fur- ,hcr notice : Leno COBOCOSK 640mm “ PENELON FALLS............8.§5 " “ STURGEON P()lh1‘.........9.15 “ Arrive u « Imnaew whafl).....10.30 “ Leave LINDSAY ..... ‘ ............ 8.00 pan. Arvim S'! URGFON POINT ....... L15 " “ FENELON FALLS. .. ..... «L45 " “ COBOCONK ................ 6.30 “ C beTniHeWâ€"iih tie again forbulinx it any point on ‘g the Lake to: gain. 1 J. w. DIAMENT, cm. “ MAPLE LEAF †Cabooonk to Linda, ......... .... .. Cohoon k to Fenclon Pd]: ......... . . Rm‘e tn Fem-Inn Fills. ..... P. ue 0n Pulls to Sm n Point†...... F'enelon Fall! w y ....... . . . . “Ka Stunner will can tt my lsoding when annulled. Freight 5nd week wried 3:. low um. Fuel-able terms fur small excursio~ patios \o my point on mute. For further intonation apply to Wm run Double Trips as follows :â€" Leave Bobcoygeon at. . . .1115 3.121.. 3.10 pm. Artist 3!. duduy u. . . "5.30 n m., 5 80 pan, Sturgeon Point, Single Fare, 35c. Bobcaygeon, Single Return STEAMER “NORTH KING†Leave Port Hope ................ 2.30 p.111. “ Cobourz ................. 1.25 “ Arrive Charlotte ..... ‘ ............. 7 I 5 “ “ Rochester (N.Y.C.) ........ 7 45 " NORTH BOUND. Leave Rochester (N.Y.C.) ........ .820 am. “ Charlotte. . ..‘ ............... 8.50 “ Arrive Cobourg .................. 1.20 p m. “ Dre†tin-n- Leave Rochestel (N .Y.C.) ........ .820 8.! “ Cbarlottq ................... 8. 50 “ Arrive Cobourg .................. 1.20 p l " Port Hope ................. 2.05 “ GEo- WILDER: H. 'H. GILDERSLEEV’E, GRAIN CAR RY! NG.â€":Arnn2ements an Cobourg, Port [‘1 f 2 Rochester, NY. station! L0. 8. OF Q. STEAMBPAT 00 Arrive In. induuy \t. . . "3.30 n m.. 5 80 p.m, am‘mmd mu. Lave Linda“ st. ...... .1130 :,m.. 5.45 p.m. arrive M. Bobaygeon at. 1.85 p.m.. 8.00 pm. TAKING EFFECT lst OF MAY THE FAST STEAMER SCHEDULE flF FARES = THE SFAMER ‘ro wmmpec ...... And ull unions ‘Nuttb-WCIE, W e I 1 z and Scum-West ‘50 \ MOOSEJAW-uv- psTEVAN. ...... YORKTUN ....... (IMNAN .......... geon Point I‘ SOUTH BOUND . KNOWLSON. LINDSAY Manage: Kingston. Return m MANITOBA AND CANADIAN NORTH-WEST Lakes :2 Agent, Lindsay Shula 70c 35c (Limited 50c. 750. $1 .00 FOR H OS Member Boyd Dental for Good Dentistryâ€"3g. DR. SUTTON, \ ~â€" namsr - lllns" Honor graduate of Toronto Univ Company-0.1813300â€, All mind . methodlogzpted and Meg? maï¬a“ “:3: “on 0130!] I“35"?!“1. (mm-u kï¬.‘ -_ (Indium of Tcronto Univ 0! Dents] Surgeons. Every dammem of denthtrv tad scientaflc manner at. mo; over lorgnn’s Drug storeâ€"17. Honor Graduate of Tomato Univmzt College of Donal Surgeons. ‘ ‘ I c! A M raved brantiiecsnmdemg.‘ ‘ m5 3p 0118mm. m». can . All the y P011 Sacco-tun - .7 . ’1’. “a â€.41 DENTIST. - - _L|NDsAy Extracts teeth without pun by Gas WW A? Wbyhm torzayemwm: mu no“; He studied the gun under Dr. Cotton, of 59' Tat-k mmdwtor extncung math. ELM mm. Redundl that he has given me gun MANN“ without 11: accident. Dr. 5M “the“ Ice-1 pun obttmdera. Bunting cg. wtoethlmertedttmodenze prim Pie-um .pogtdamd More coming. Oï¬oe nearly 0% the 3mm House, Lindsay. ~2 DR E. A. TOTTEN nmlsr, Most‘llodem Dentiam' p adenine manner. DR. ARTHUR DAY ‘ DENTIST successes TO m: um: oz. um DR. F. A. WALTEF DENTIST. - “"93†lambs of Toronto Dean! C9365"? : Univenity. Also graduate of Anna: DR. NEELANDS U at Toronto Universitv Medal F4633? an madman University,1‘ommo '3 him (1 C nose of Physician- uni Sum-33:15. Omar mmmmmmndmy and Russel m. TelephonoWwâ€"fl ly. U and residence north-east come: Olmbfldgeâ€"m Telephone 51. U toGwlsndSameontoGT.R Li: W Uï¬eehonnlowwxnn'ltwum; 8 p.31. W30 Weizmann; [21622. 15:; No.43. .I.’ 8.0. 0603 and roddneoe Corner of Linda} MMM [lacunae of Roy; Cobeged Phyiciul and Summits, Eiinburzh. License «1 Kiddie: Edinbur. 'm’h. Specnl sneaks: .. vc: -: gain!†and diseases of women. Telephne Ea V 0mm residence. Ruse-«t. Lindsy.» onddoorwustdYotk-sc. Oï¬oeh3m, 9.00 3.2.: law-.11: 1.309121. hosp.m.. md.’ to 5 p.222. APR J. smpsox. gnaw: of Univ. 0: mama; Mano W Oolhgeol Physicisns md 3mg“. Ont. Lab of Wood Asylum, Kinsman. Gui Trunk Sum, Had-3y maria. Lindsay Pea-u- u'y, 4th. 11. (mamâ€"mom d .c .58. .0 av. 860 deem 5:3 «a .33 a 235 «a .3 .333 i) H' Solicitor, ew, 0mm) Clerk at the Pace, Mini-say. Block. foot 0! Kern Street; m 8% Solicitors. etc 0:2: mop-mate the Dd: House. Ken: Strce: JOHN XCSWEYX DONALD IL .4 MCSWEYN A313}: .. mm Salicm rs ctv.‘ E U) Q);- ‘J Bum Now-ice, etc. U Bank, Kent-fl... Lindsay. Money Mates. '1‘. STEWART. L V. C “ BISTEBS, $02.:cm 1-2: Milton's Block. Kent-s1“ L2: T0 LOAN a very Lowest Rana. Md loneson' nun. LISdSIyitr’mC‘S 1V1 â€"i1707 â€"W 501-14105 av 33 M [melon hm. Lmdsn) umce, M67 M‘ mt“. We at lounng meatloaf-:1“ 1'6“" “W mm! d am , on m 50: mugs: the \6t) 1000'â€; we or chst'el In“ We do notiond on no Alum D I 13.! gun"? he Vletofln ad the Bank st low onmonunge- Wi'liun-at, Lindsay. I. D. IOORK. PET MEI; BROWN, ‘Auct‘ou CV" KENNY \\ Emmy 3; DIRT‘L‘DC «in! H‘qu 11:. .4†J-..“ 1 - times. Caesars P.0.. conducted in my motthe~ u moonbly u in my “‘1’ v!“ n. 'imm‘dw Deg": hathood . Experienced in .11 kludï¬ "1 ‘ “ample. Wmmb'ï¬ Ammew’d‘“ condom ales 0! dl kind: in Blimposiw wavered v~mpd3'-f;’i>¢ at KAN 0m“. Crown und Bridge Work a specialty auge- modaate. MOORE JACKSONâ€"Ba! Pt? 5 m “c. Solicitors {or “NAP-€73“: MCLAUGHLIN 3 mo. Bun-intern. Solzcimrs. -â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" “C- THOMAS SWAIX , J?» As... IL J. KENNY. B. J. HeLAUGHLlN . of {mt WeMuwu‘gï¬n “awe: .31. pct com... on t TEWART 8: O’CONNOR AUGUST _ H. GROSS neunsr, . . JEFFERS. MONEYTO L0AN . A. GILLESPIE, CA. AND P. DEVLIN, BARRISTER WHITE, GRADUATE OF H. HOPKINS. SIMPSON, PHYSI . E. VROOMAN ($1an 10 :55“ @arristtrs, \~5. ï¬hysicians I‘Brtwnkvéi noun-ed. a [avast mm '"-7"-' mswevn 85 AND Quctionrcrs OFFICEâ€"9‘ Kent Strut 10‘ [xi 3.0“ 031 v. o'coxxox. R ALEX. MOW O: EVENT“ - A ‘5' “513m SICIAX OTC HONEY