Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman Warder (1899), 31 Aug 1899, p. 10

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Bring your Repairing here. Moderate prices for gni work, done promptly. Watches, Clocks, Jewellry, Silverware Spectacles, Pocket-Becks, Gold-Headed Canes Novelties, Etc. Muskoka Tourist Season Tho Wcéd Company. Windsor, Ont HWoxl‘s Phnspodine is sold in Lindsay by . Urcgury. D uggist. is premred to fu'uiah :ha use We of Lindsav and sur- rounding cmntry with M )SUKEX PS and HEAD- S‘I‘ONEJS, both Mgrble and Granite. J01!“ MGQWOGG: Jamas LOW. " iii-hie Table Tapa, Wash Tops, Mantle Pieces, etc., a. gpfidalty. I. c in ,‘ ,,,‘j -A- LS- work . wur v. --.- Being a om’icxi’W) -,kmm fill a'mu'd see his designs and compare prices before purchasing else- - v. 'v--- * w Deposits of $I .00 and upward taken, with- draw xhle at any time. upon which currentlrates of interest will be allowed. whei'e “WOVRK 4 â€"In the rear of the links: on C; nhrilge- st,. opp )site the puking house. ROBT. CHAMBEPTS I):b:mures issued for periods‘of frOm one to five yzus for sums of $100 and upwards. Interest coupons attached. payable barf-yearly at 4 per gent.‘ ‘ ‘ 7,-#1 A_L-_ m:6L Batguins ‘ ‘ The Great English Remedy. -; Sold and recommended by all dmgglsts in Canada. On] reli- \\ able medicine disoove . Si: .‘ 9.‘ : facing“ gmmmteed to cure all forms of Sexua Weakness. all effects of abuse or excess, Mental Worry. Excessive use of 'l‘o- baceo. Opium or Stimulants. Mailed on recelpt of price, one ache-Re 81. six. :5. One will please. «twill airy. Il’amplgslgts free to a_xg_y qddregs. _ Lindsay Mam On to vn and farm property at current rates interest. CJsts msdemte, and no delay. in fi \- orporated under Cap xpress Ofl’ice, Lin ls-Lijnt. The Victmia Lean and t0 This is your own Cmnty Comoany. Farm Property. Coun‘rv Sth vols and Churches only are insured by this Company. Blanket Policie< are issued. The rates are l-uwer than those of any other Company in the County. For particulxs apply Farmurs’ Union Mutual Fire insurance company. FARMERS Estimates promptly given on all kinds of cemetery ROBT. CHAMBERS; SAVINGS COMPANY Savings Department The Ieweller, 77 Kent Street, West Side. . G. Corned, 10 HONEngg J. S thliam Street, Llndsay. Head Office, LINDSAY, Oxr. Retur; Tickets from now unil snow flies next fall an FARE AND THIRD. Cd“ Rb Ellpreae Utfize for your tickets. Cheap»; rates than ever to Rxheawr vm North King. when 30 1 insure patronize the SECRETARY AND AGENT G 810. WIL DER f- Wood's Phosphcdine, For the month of August President . McfiARTY LOAN . 159, R. s. o. 8 Works Secretary n! In the first place, I remark that busi- ness life was intended as a school of energy. God gives us a certain amount of raw material out of which we are to hew our character. Our faculties are to be reset, rounded and sharpened up. Our young folks having graduated from school or college need a higher education. that which the rasping collision of every- day life alone can effect. Energy is wrought out only in the tire. After a man has been in business activitv 10.20, 30 years, his energy is not to be measured by weights or plummets or ladders. There is no height it cannot scale, and there is no dept-h it; cannot fathom, and there is no obstacle it cannot thrash. Now, my brother, Why did God put you in that school of energy? Was it mere-iv that you might be a yardstick to measure cloth. or a. stcclyard to weigh flour? Was it merely that you might be better qualified to chaffer and higgle? No. God placed you in that school of energy that you might be developed for Christian work. If the undeveloped tal- ents in the Christian churches of to-day Were brought out and thoroughly harn- essed, I believe the whole earth would be converted to God in a twelvemonth. There are so men‘y deep streams that are turning no mill wheels and that ar: harnessed to no facwry bands. We are under the impression that the moil and tug of business life are a prison into which a man is thrust, or that it is an unequal strife where unarmed a man goes forth to contend. I shall show you this morning that business life was intended of God for grand and glorious education and discipline, and it I shall be helped to say what I want to say I shall rub some of the wrinkles of care out of your brow and unstrap some of the burdens from your back. i am not talking of an abstraction. Though never having been in business life. I know all about business men. In my first parish at Belleviiie, X.J.. ten miles from New York, a large portion of my audience Was male up of New York merchants. ’l":-..-.: I went to Syracuse, a place of immense commvrclal activity, and then I Went to l":-.iladolpbia and lived lone amen: 12w merchants of that city, than when: there are no better men on earth, and for ‘25 years I stood in my Brooklyn pulpit. Sabbath by Sabbath, preaching to audiences the majority of whom were businr,::.<. men and business women. It is no: all abstraction of which I speak. but a reality with which I am well acquainted. New, God demands the best lamb out of every flock He demands the richest sheaf of every harvest. He demands the best men of every generation. A cause in which Newton and Locke and Mans- field toiled You and I can afford to toil in. Oh, for fewer idlers in the cause of Christ and for more Christian workers, men who shall take the same energy that from Monday morning to Saturday night they put forth for the achievement of a. livelihood or the gathering of a fortune. and on Sabbath days put it forth to the advantage of Christ's kingdom and the bringing of men to the Lord. him: “I had to be very busy for many years of my life getting my livelihood. After awhile this fortune came to me. and there has been no necessity that 1 soil since. There came a time when I said to myself, ‘Shall I now retire from business or shall I- go on and serve the Lord in my worldly oocupnhion?’ ” He said: “I resolved on the latter, and I have been more industrious in commem- Sal circles shun I ever was before. and Dr. Dufl ”visited a. man who hgd in- pgrited 3; great fortune. The man said to So that there must be one continuous line of sympathy with each other’s work. But whatever your vocation. if you have a multiplicity of engagements. if into your life there come losses and annoyances and perturbations as well as percentages and dividends, if you are pursued from Monday morning until Sas- urday night. and from January to Janu- ary by inxeorable obligation and duty. chen you are a business mam. or you are a business woman. and my subjecc is appropriate to your case. to go forth into that battlefield, and others blamed the English Government for accepting the sacrifice, and others blamed the anus for their barbarism. The one most to blame was the harness- maker who fashioned that strap of the stirrup out of shoddy and imperfect material, as it was found to have been afterward. If the strap had held. the Prince Imperial would probably have been alive to-day. But the strap broke. No prince independent of a harness maker! High, low, wise. ignorant, you in one occupation, I in another, all bound together. When the Prince Imperial of France fell on the Zulu battlefield because the strap fastening the stirrup to the saddle broke as he clung to it, his commdes all escaping, but he falling under the lances of the savages. a great many people blamed the Empress for allowing her son The industrial classes are divided into three groupsâ€"producers, manufacturers. traders. Producers, such as farmers and miners. Manufacturers, such as those who turn corn into food and wool and flax into apparel. Traders,_ such as make profit out of the transfer and exchange of all that which is produced and manu- factured. A business man may belong to any one or all of these classes. and not one is independent of any other. Industry, devoutness and Christian serviceâ€"all commended in that short text. What. is it possible that they shall be conjoined? Oh, yes. There is no war between religion and business, between lodgers and Bibles, between churches and counting houses. 0n the contrary, reli- gion accelerates business, sharpens men’s wits. sweetens accrbity of disposition, flllips the blood of phlegmatics and throws more velocity into the wheels of hard work. It gives better balancing to the judgment, more strength to the will. more muscle to industry and throws into enthusiasm a more consecrated fire. You cannot in all the circle of the world show me a man whose honest business has been dcspoiled by religion. Washington, Aug. 27.â€"Rev. Dr. Tal- mage 1:001: for his pexb Romans xii. 1]. “Not slochful in business; fervent in spirit; serving the Lord.” He said: W6 Should Put Forth the Same Energy in the Cause of Christ That ”We Do in the Achievement of a. Livolihood RELIGION ‘IN- AFFAIRS OF LIFE. TRADE AS A TEACHER wm<. Um. ._.>_Ls>0m.m 0â€"mOOCmmm OZ .24m0w_4< :1. ow_mem. Many Obligations. the Gathering of a Fortuneâ€"Our Never so many temptations to scoun- drelism a: now. Not a law on the statute book but has -some back door through which a miscreant can escape. Ah. how many deceptions in the fabric ot the l goods! So much plundering in cmnmcro- i 111.1 life that if a man ml]: about living a life of complete comnmrcial integrity there are those who ascribe it to green- ness and lack of tact. More need of hon- esty now than over beforeâ€"tried honesty, complete honestyâ€"more than in those times when business was a plain afiair and woollena Were woolleus, and silks were silks and men were men. I remark also that business life is a school for integrity. No man knows what he will do until he is tempted. There are thousands of men who have kept their integrityr merelv because they never have been tested. A man Was elected treasurer of the State of Maine some years ago. He was distinguished for his honesty. usefulness and uprightncss, but before one vear had passed he had taken of the public funds for his own private use and was hurled out or cflice in disgrace. Distinguished for virtue be- fore. Distinguished for crime after. You can call over the names of men just like that. in whose honesty you had complete confidence. but placed in certain crises of temptation they went overboard. Can it be that you have been dealing with foreign lands and never had the missionary spirit. wishing the salvation of foreign people? Can it be that you have become acquainted with all the outrages inflicted in , business life and that you have never tried to bring to bear that gospel which is to cxtirpate all evil and correct all wrong: and illuminate all and save men {or this world and the World darkness and lift up all wretchedncss to come? Can it be that understanding all the intricacies of business you know nothing about those things which will last after all bills of exchange and (-on- signmente and invoices and rent rolls shall have crumpled up and been con- sumed in the fires of the last great day? Can it be that a man will be Wise for time and a fool for eternity? How many men do you suppose there are in commercial life who could say truthfully. “In all the sales I have ever made I have never overstated the value of goods: in all the sales I have ever made I have m ver covered up an imper- fection in the fabric; in all the thousands of dollars I hme ever made I have not taken one dishonest tarnhimz?" 'I'hcre are men. however. who can lay in. hundreds Who can say it. thousands who can say it. They are more honesfi than when they sold their first fierce of rice. or their first flrkln of butter, because their honesty end mum-m hove been tested. tried and Traders in grain com. to know some- thing about foreign harvests; tradcrs in fruit come to know something about the prospects of tropical production: manu- facturers of American goods come to understand the tariff on imported arti- cles; publishers of books must come to understand the new law of copyright: owners of ships must come to know winds and shoals and navigation, and every bale of cotton and every raisin cask and every tea box and every cluster of bananas is so much literature for a busmess man. Now. my brother. what are you going to do with the intelligence? Do you suppose God put you in this school of information merely that you might be sharper in a trade. that you mighthbe more successful as a worldling? Oh, no. It was that y6u might‘take that useful information and use it or Jesus Christ. I remark again that business life is a school of useful knowledge. Merchants do not read many books and do not study lexicons. They do notdive into profounds of learning, and yet nearly all through their occupations come to understand questions of finance. and politics. and geography, and jurisprudence. and ethics. Business is a severe sohoolniistress. If pupils will not learn, she strikes them over the head and the heart with severe losses. You put $5.000 into an enterprise. It is all gone. You say. “That is a dead loss.” Oh, no. You are paying the school- ing. That was only tuition, very large tuitionâ€"I told you it wasa severe school. mistressâ€"but it was worth it. You learn ed things under that process you Would. not have learned in any other way. Oh, that amid the turmoil and anxiety and exasnemtion of; everyday life you might hear the voice of God saying: “In patience possess yourgsoul. Let patience have her perfect work.” All that process will either break you down er brighten you up. It is a school of patience. You have known men under the process to become petulant, and chol- erio, and angry. and pugnacious, and cross, and sour, and queer, and they lost their customers, and their name became a. detestation. Other men have been bright- ened up under the process. They were toughened by the exposure. They were like rocks. all the more valuable for be. ing blasted. At first they had to choke down their wrath, at first they had to bite their lip. at first they thought of some stinging retort they Would like to make. but they conquered their impa- tience. They have kind words now for sarcastic flings. They have gentle behav- ior now for unmannerly customers. They are patient now with unfortunate debt- ors. They have Christian reflections now for sudden reverses. Where did they get that patience? By hearing a minister preach concerning it on Sabbath? Oh. no. They go: it just where you will get itâ€"if you ever get it at allâ€"selling hats, discounting notes, turning banisters, plowing corn, tinning roofs, pleading causes. Again. I remark that business life is a school of patience. In your everyday life how many things to annoy and to dis- quiet! Bargains will rub. Commercial men will sometimes fail to meet their engagements. Cashbooks and monev drawer will sometimes quarrel. Goods ordered for a special emergency will come too late or be damaged in the transporta- tion. People intending no harm will go shopping without any intention of pur- chase, overturning great stocks of goods and insisting that you break the dozen. More bad debts on the ledger. lore counterfeit bills in the drawer. More debts to pay 1' or other people. More mean- nesses on the part of partners in busi- ness. Annoyance after annoyance, vexaâ€" tion after vexation, and loss after loss. since that hour I have never kept a far- thing for myself. I have thought it to be a great shame if I couldn’t toil as hard for the Lord as I had toiled for myself. and all the products of my factories and my commerclal establishments, to the last fax-thing. have gone for the building of Christian institutions and supporting the church of God.” Would that the same energy put forth for the world could be put forth for God. Would that a thousand men in these great cities who have achieved a fortune could see it their duty now to do all business for Christ and the alleviation of the world’s sufi‘er- ing! THE WATCHMAN-WARDEE: LINDSAY. 0N1] A procesu has been invented and pat- 011th in Brazil for preparing cone. in tabldlds by}. ”stem 0; compression. With the consent of the Turkish Gov- ernment. some Greek divers begun in- vestigations a short time ago at the bot. tom of the sea near Chios. where, in 1770. at the battle of Chesnie, the Turk- ish fleet was totally destroyed. and the Russian flagship sunk. The divers have been most successful. and will profit largelv. notwithstanding that the Turk~ ish Government claims a considerable share. The Russian ship has been found. 30 fathoms deep, full of gold and silver coins. Acoordinn: to The Revue d‘Orient, nearly 300,000 francs have already been obtained. and a still larger sum is be- lieved to be in the hold. A Turkish ship is lying at anchor near the spot. and every sack brought up is at once counted and its contents booked by the ofiicere. From 5.000 to 10.000 gold pieces are got out every day. The coins, however, are not the only valuables found. among the booty beinz sold and silver crosses, jewelry. 8mm. etc., and > the cover of a large book. made of solid gold and studded with precious “onesâ€"Vienna correspondent London Standard. I had a friend who bud many niistortâ€" unes. Everything went; against; him. He had good business capacity and Wes of the best of morals, but. he was one of those men such as you have sometimes seen. for whom everything seems to go wrong. His life became to him a plague. When I heard he was dead, I said. “Good â€"â€"got rid of the sheriffs!" Who are those lustrous souls before the throne? When the 'question is asked. ”Who are they?" the angels standing on the sea of glass respond. “These are they who came out of great; business trouble and had their robes washed and made white in the blood of the Lamb.” We talk about the martyrs of the Pied- mont Valley, and the martyrs among the Scotch highlands, and the martyrs at Oxford. There are just as certainly mar- tyrs of Wall street and State street. martyrs of Fulton street and Broadvmy, martyrs of Atlantic street and Chestnut street. going through hotter fires, or bar- ingtheir necks under sharper axes. Then it behooves us to banish all {retfulness from our lives, if this subject be true. We look back to the time when we were at school, and we remember the rod. and we remember the hard tasks, and we complained grievoualy. but now we see it was for the best. Business life is a school, and the tasks are, hard and the chastisements sometimes are very griev- ous. But do not complain. The hotter the tire the better the refining. There are men before the throne of God this day in triumph who on earth were cheated out of everything but their coflin. They Were sued. they were imprisoned for debt. they were throttled by constables with a whole pack of writs. they were sold out by the sherifis, they had to com- promise with their creditors, they had to make assignments. 'l'heir dying hours were annoyed by the sharp ringing of the doorbell by some impetuous creditor who thought it was outrageous and im. pudent that a man should dare to die before he paid the last half dollar. Plato and Aristotle were so opposed to merchandise that they declared commerce to be the curse of nations. and they_ad- vised that cities be built at least ten miles from the seacoast. But you and I know there are no more industrious or highminded men than those who move in the world of traffic. Some of them carry burdens heavier than had: of brick. and are exposed to sharper things than the east wind, and climb mountains higher than the Alps or Himalayas, and it they are faithful Christ will at last satho them: "Well done. good and Iaithful servant. Thou hast been faithful over a few things. I will make thee ruler over many things. Enter then into the joy 01 thy Lord.” ' As I go on in this subject, I am im- pressed with the importance of our hav- ing more sympathy with business men. Is it not a shame that we in our pulpits do not oftener preach abbut their strug- gles, their trials and their temptations? Men who toil with the hand are not apt to be very sympathetic with those who toil with the brain. The farmers who raise the corn and the oats and the wheat sometimes are tempted to think that grain merchants have an easy time and get their profits without giving any equivalent. A merchant in Liverpool got a £5 Bank of England note, and, holding it up toward the light, he saw some inter- lineations in what seemed red ink. He finally dceiphered the letters and found at that the Writing had been made by a slave in Algicrs. saying: in substance, “Whoever gets this bank note Will please inform my brother. John Dean, living near Carlisle. that I am a slave of the Bey of Algiers.” The merchant sent word. employed government officers and found who this man was spoken of in this bank bill. After awhile the man was rescued. who for 11 years had beona slave of the Boy of Algiers. He was immediately emancipated. but was so worn out by hardship and exposure he soon after died. Oh, if some of the bank bills that come through your hands could tell all the scenes through which they have passed, it would he a tragedy oclipsing any drama. of Shakespeare, mightier than King Lear or Macbeth! WUA Vuu var vâ€" -__- I ‘ fire. They can say their prayers without hearing the Chink of dishonest dollars. They can read their Bible without think- ing of the time when with a lie on their soul in the custom,house they kissed the book. They can think of death and the judgment that somes after it without any flinching-â€"that day when all charla~ tans and cheats, and jockeys and frauds shall be doubly damned. It does not make their knees knock tagether. and it does not make their teeth chatter to read “as the partridge sitteth on eggs and hatcheth them not, so he that getteth riches. and not by right, shall leave them in the midst of his days, and at his end shall be a fool.” 'l‘haitizrion'iy o‘r'zce 'has ruified tens of thousands of men for this life and blasted their souls for eternity. What a school of integrity business life is! If you have ever been tempted to let you integrity cringe before present advantage, if you have ever wakonod no in some embarrassment and said, “Now, I will step a. little aside from the right path and no one will know it. and I will come all right again. it is only once.” a partner, or have absconded wmn mu funds of a bank, or sprung a snap judg- ment, or made a false assignment, or borrowed illimimbly without any efforts at payment, or got; a man into a sharp come out; triumphant. Bus may remem- Lur a time whey they could have robbed " ~ J m.“\ *J'Ifl Discovery of 2. Treasure Ship. Compressed cog-Q“ -Vivvuâ€"uw vnIII‘UI he nude with the Ltpum the Luke for gain. wave sonny n at. . ...6.15 mm" 3.10 pan. Arrim st .111 y “00.8.80: m.. 5.30 p.m, nmuxxe mm. Lave Linden at ...... .1130 t m.. 5 45 pm. urive gt Bobmygeon u 1.35 p.m . 8 00 pm. Sturgeon Point, Single Fare, 31 (I 6‘ Return “ 54 Bobca__ygeon, Single " 7.‘ â€"PLYING BET\VEEN-â€" Bobcaygeon, Lindsay and Stur- geon Point will run Double Trip. :3 follow :- {Anya ngogygeon M. . ...6.15 1.111.. 3.10 mm. On and after THURSDAY. IUNE Ist, the Trent Valley Navigation Go. THE Stetmer will cm at- any landing when damned. Freight and parcels carried at. low nus. Favorsble terms fâ€"vr small excufsion parties to any point on route. For further inlormuion :pply to Coboconkto Lindsay ..... . Coboconk to Penelon F3119 ....... Roaedale to Pension Falls ........ Fenelon Falls to Sturgeon Point. . Fenclon Falls to Lindssy ......... This staunch steamer is now fitted with a hurricane deck and canvas awning on both decks. and by recent improvements in machin- ery she will travel faster than ever. Her carrying capacity is about 200 passengers, or when accompanied by the Excursion Barge (which is now in first-class condition and is also provided with a canvas awning) has a capacity of about 750 to 800 passengers. Write earlv for terms and dates to Commencing THURSDAY, MAY nth. will run on the following timetable until fur- ther notice : Leave COBOCONK ................ 6.40 gm. “ FENELON FALLS... . .......S.45 “ “ STUBGEON POINT.........9.15 “ Arrive LINDSAY (new what). . . ..10.30 “ Leno LINDS \Y .................. 3.00 p.m. Arrive STURGEON POINT ........ 4.15 “ “ FENELON FALLS. . . ...... L45 " “ COBOCON K ................ 6.30 0‘ “Kawartha Lakes” on reasonablc‘ terms during the season of ’99. For further pcrtic ulna dpply to the nearest Cm- adim Pacific Agent, or to T. G. Matchett, Agent C )wan J Edmont'n {"9 Frgn: I}! p_oint.a in _0n_tario. Windsor and East. WILL BE BUN ON Aug. 29th. Returning until Oct. 28th and Sept. IZth, .. H uov. llth, I899 RETURN FARES T0 Winnipeg Delorame Reston Esteva Binscarth Moosomm “ MAPLE SCHUULS BEâ€"UPENING J. RIGGS, Rigg’S Store is well suppiied with new books such as: “Kawartha‘ EXCU RS-l ONS Harvest Excursions ESTURION Big variety to choose from at SEASON OF t899. DOUBLE TRIPS Kent=st. Lindsay THE FAST STEAMER -â€"Lead Pa :2 oils â€"â€"Pens wâ€"Ink â€"â€"Envelopes -â€"Writing paper -â€"Lock Boxes â€"â€"Rulers â€"â€"Rubber-Eraers - Pen Holders â€"â€"Rea.dors __Copy Books. ”Drawing Books â€"â€"Scribb1ers -â€"â€"Slates CAPT. J. D. VARCOE, oquR, LINDSAY 9.0. SGHEDULE 0F FARES = J. M. KNOWLSON. LINDSAY THE STEAMER (LIMITED) . W. DIAMENT, Capt. {or can ling M. tiny poiht Von Regina , Moosjaw ‘ $ Prince Albt: Calg Yorgkaton Red Deer ’ Edmont’n a p.15 t.m.. §.10 p.211, ‘-_ Slade Return 70c $1 00 35c 50¢ :IUL:35 $316140 35¢. we have a huge wwgfim ‘ g” per mm... on ' Ion Prom- M to unit mvfifn ., M "' tioneer. CW c“ candueud _in 305 pm m 01130:. 3 CORE JACKSOI listen, etc. Solicitms for ‘1‘! Victoriasnd the Bank at Massed. ‘0 on mom at lowsst omen: m6 Wi'liun-n. Unduy. A--" "‘l 1110, Banners. eoucxww. Md Fem-ton Eula. Lwduy UM Kent-as. We are lowing mane! 0" mm in same lanmwd will. I! on the bee! terms and at the V01" lntemt. We do an! lend 34 went)“ _ A T £11393? :XCSN RISTERS, so new Hunflton' a Block Kent st. . To LOAN :1. very Lou e51 Bat JJ-L Burlsters, Solicitors tely Opposite the Daly House, JOHN E SWEY .\ D< of Toronto L'nixersitr Xed'a.‘ F gnduate of Trinity University, Torus: a of Cullege 0! Physicians an: 5-1::er Ofioe South-east, corner Linda-3: and East: Telephoae 107 .â€"23 13'. Lou: at Lowest- Rntes. cm 1‘0. 6 U' Solicitor for the Oaurio Bunk. % south. G. H. HOPKINS. H' Solicitor, etc, Counzy Crgn Clerk of the Pace. Minds“. 0120!. Block. foot of Kent Street. STEWART x OKOBM Barristers, Numries. as. rice 0‘25 Bank. Kent-8;, Lindy}: Money tow lowest. mm. . T. STEWART. L. Y. O'CONNL U 8.0. 0600 And I‘d.“ Gert and Bun-nu m. Unlin- d by; ' Physician and Surgeons, Eiinbnrt‘n " Iidwifery, Edinbuuh. Specs; amt: Midwifery sad diseases 0! womzz. Ie'. ' 98.â€"35. u Ofloo sud residence. 811399 42.. it and doc: west of You-km. Office 11311:“ 10.30xm.; 1.30 gun. ms p.m.. uni? m5 J. SIXPSON, gnduue 0! Univ. (1 h Tomato Medial College of thra'cim 8nd Ont. Into of Redwood Afi'inm. Khan try, “.11. 1891. MCSWEYN 3: AND}: Ran-intent. Solid: rs 6:: J- Extracts teeth without pain by administered by him (or 26 yam He studied the gas under Dr cm the originator of gas for emu writes Dr. Reelanda that he by; 186,417 perms without :1: iccid use: the best local pain obtnnd. new teeth moaned at moderate I apostslcu-d before coming. 01 the Simpson House. Lindsay. H to Gaol and Surgeon to 6.1. ‘- Distzict. OficehounIOtolSLmfitoE} Spun. MdenceSOWeUi no N.43. n“ 4m" ademific unmet. Crown md Bridge Work 3 Charges InOdente. U‘“ r. A. WALTER usunsr, - ”le Honor Graduate of Tormm 1; College of Dental Surgeons. mm"?! DR ARTHLR DAY DENTIST successon 10 m: we on McLAUGHLIN MC um Rnrrhters. 501$in f KENNY WELDON, nle'r'cnc en! IPYFURS. [ember at Toronto Dental C University. Also graduate of DR SIMPSON, PHYS! MAL-n1 “4_‘_-- g. R. J. UCLA ('68le H. J. KENNY. F. D. MOORE. )R. NEELAAE DENTIST. .‘ .A. GILLESPIE, C. A P. DEVLIN. BARRIS YVHITE, GRADL'A JEFEgRs (D flarristcrs. Rurtionms fihpsisizms BROWN. 3 ‘. VROOMAN orrsca-“ Km 318T, :5th m ' 'I DONALD n. m th IAVE for Iiil 2’! ”it ‘ hen you buy 'ate fl; at

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