Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman Warder (1899), 5 Oct 1899, p. 7

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

MW! Insurance OnJu First-Glass companies Representsd Money to Loan. incorporated under Cap. 169, I! ead Office, LINDSAY, ONT. On to «m and farm property at current mates of interest. Casts modexate, and no delay. The Victmia Loan and John Mauwood, Jamega Low. m fiéposits of $1 .00 and u‘ draWabIe at anytime, upon of interest W111 be allowed. Dsbenture: issued for periods‘of fmm one to Ev; years for sums of $100 and upwards. Inzerest coupons attached. payable barf-yearly at 4 per cent. , Deposits of $1 .00 and upward taken, with- deable at any time, upqn which currentlrates Lindsay Mable Works Estimates pro nptty given on all kinds of cemetery work Marble Table Tops, Wuh Tops, Mantle Pieces, etc., asp:cizslty. _ Being a braviczl workmm, $11 3‘10qu see Ins else- desigr's and compare pfiCcS before purcnasiug where. WORK; â€"In the rear of the Shrket on Cambridge- st,. opszxte the pxc'xmg nuuse. ROBT CHAMBERS rented to furnish :he ma‘e of Lindsay 3nd sur- ouadiug cannery with MOSUKEXPS and BEAD- _ 31‘ ON 85, both Marble and Granite. Western Excursions P)! t Huron, Dcuoit - - Cl 'VC' «mi - . . . 5 ”(and l\ suid: - - - 8 Can; \g ; 0: Cincinnati - - 12 kae: g.) .d gomg Sept. 23, 29 and 30. Rczumiug 0.1. 15th. Fail particular: on application to . EKDPGSS 051cc. Lmdsay. Ont. SAVINGS COMPANY ROBT. CHAMBERS l0 Up-Io-Date Our stock is new. neat and natty. No 01d shop- worn Jewelry. M. E. Tangney, 'ance effected 'on Town, Vil- lage and Farm Property. Fancy Clocks, Watches, Chain”. Engagement and Wedding- Rings, MONEY TO LOAN Siive rware Furniture and Undertaking Repairing done promptly and properly at moderâ€" ate rates. 0 pp. Benson W. E MBBABTY, Prettiest Goods in town; 77 Kent-S:.,_South Side. President Chirges Moderate GEO. WILDER, CHEAP Cap. 169, No Solicitors’ Fees or Commission Secretary Lindsay PRAISE. FOR'HBROES. REV. Q8. TALMA'GE’S SERMON 0N DEWEY’ 5 HOME COMING. The Glory of the .‘a‘ ”ascribes the Great Olden and More 8‘ Lands Their Heroic Bravery aha Devotix “BEHOLD' ALSO ‘New York, Oct. 1.â€"-To_:day, “Dewey Sunday,” the great admiral still being the city’s guest, and the whole nation stirred with the mag- reception accorded to him and the gallant sailors of the Olymâ€" pia, Rev. Dr. Talmage in this ser- mon, preaching to a‘vast audience in the gospel tent, Fifty-sixth street and Broadway, appropriately. recalls for devout and patriotic purposes some of the great naval deeds of olden and more recent times; text, Jalncs, 111, 4, “Behold also the ships.”’ - . ,- , __ ---.‘ n n nrxrnY\riâ€" Ships. . . If this exclamation Was appropri- ate about 1872 years ago, " when it was written. concerning ‘the crude fishing smacks that sailed Lake Gam- lilee, how much more apprOpriate in. an age which has launched from the drydocks for purposes of peace the. Oceanic of the White Star line, the Lucania of the Cunard line, the St. Louis of the American line, the Kais-" er Wilhelm der Grosse of the North German Lloyd line,- the Augusta _Vicâ€". toria of the Hamburg-American line, and in an age which for purposes of war has launched screwsloops like .the Idaho, the Shenandoah, the Ossi- pee and our ironclads like the Kala; mazoo. the Roanoke and the Dunderâ€" berg, and these which have already been buried in the deep, like ‘the Monitor, the Housatonic and the Weehawken, the tempests ever since sounding ‘a volley. over their watery sepulchers, and the Oregon and the Brooklyn, and the Texas and the Olympia, the Iowa, the Massachu- setts. the Indiana, the New York. the Marietta of the last war, and the scarred veterans of war shipâ€" ping. like the Constitution or the Alâ€" liance or the Constellation, that have swung into the naval yards to spend their last days, their decks now all silent of the feet that trod them. their rigging all silent of the hands that clung to them. their portholes silent of the brazen throats that once thundered out of them. If in the first century, when war vessels were dependent on the oars that paddled at the side of them for propulsion, my text, was suggestive. with how much more emphasis and meaning and overwhelming reminis- Cence we can cry out as we see the Kearsarge lay across the bows of the Alabama and sink it. ‘ Full justice has been done to the men who at different times fought on the land, but not enough has been said of those who on ship's deck dared and suffered all things. Lord God of the rivers and the sea, help me in this sermon! So ye adâ€" inirais, commanders. captains, pilots, gunners, boatswains. saihnakers. surgeons, stokers, messmates and st-amen of all names, to use your oun parlance, We might as Well get under way and stand out to sea. Let all landluhbers go ashore. Full speed now! Four bells! l recite toâ€"day the deeds of our naval heroes. many of whom lime not yet received appropriate recog- nition. “Behold also the ships." Asi “u will never know what our new! tior-i prosperity is worth until \\t' v‘ ,.../.t‘ what it costs, I recall the tn- recited fact that the men of the navy; in all our mars ran especial risks. 1""? I..;d not only the, human Weap- «try to contr-zid with. but the. tides. the fog, the storm. Not like other ships could 1'41; run into harhor at the :tgmr' : tit of an equinox or a cyâ€" v‘ . .- a hurricane, because the bar- :..s were hostile. A n‘iiscalculation of a tide might leave them on a bar, and a fog might overthrow all the plans of wisest commodore and ad- miral, and the accident might leave, them not on the land ready for an ainbula lCO. but at the bottom of the sea. as when inour civil war the torpedo boat blew up the Tecumm-h in Mobile bay and nearly all on board perished. They were at the mercy of the. Atlantic and Pacific oceans, which have no mercy. SUch tempests as wrecked the Spanish ar- mada might any day swoop upon the scptadron. No hiding behind the earthworks, no digging in of cavalry spurs at the sound of retreat: Might- ier than all the fortresses on all the coasts is the ocean when it bom- bards a flotilla. ~ In the cemeteries for Federal and Confederate dead are the bodies of most, of those who fell on the land. 'lut where those are who Went down in the war vessds will not be known until the sea gives up its dead. The Jack 'l‘ars knnw that while loving: arms might carry the men who fell on the land and bury them with solâ€" emn liturgy and the honors of war. for the bodies of those .who (lromied from the rattlines into. the sea or Went down with all on board under the stroke of a gunboat there re- mained the shark and the whale and the endless tossing of the sea Which cannot res . Once a. year, in the decoration of tne graves, those who fell in the land Were remembered. But how about the graves of those who went down at sea? Nothing but the arehangel’s trumpet shall reach their lowly bed. A few of‘ them were gathered into naval ceme- teries of the land, and we every year garland the sod that covers them. It looks picturesque and beautiful i to see a. war Vessel going out through the Narrows, sailors in new rig singing, A life on the ocean Wave, A home on the rolling'deeb, the colors gracefully dipping 'to pass- ing ships, the decks immaculately clean nd the guns at quarantine er- ing ,arting salute. But‘the poetry is all gone out of that ship as it- comes out of that engagement, .its decks red with human. DLOOd. Wheel- ouse gone, the cabins, a. pile ,of, shattered mirrors and destroyed furs niturg. . steering ' wheel broken , smoke. y of the Navyâ€"Tho Preacher be: the Great Naial Deeds of and More Recent. Timesâ€"Bo Their Heroic Deeds and Their ,‘v aiul Devotion. THE SHIPS.” etack crushed, :3»; burial-ed pound :WhitWorth rifle shot. having left: its mark from» port. to. starboard” the. shrouds rent aWay,‘ ladders s’plintr ered and decks plowed up and 51116ka blackened and scaldedl‘v corpses lying among those who are gasping their last gasp far away from home and kindred, whom they love as much as we love wife and parents and «chilâ€"‘ dren. It is considered a. gallant thing when in. a. naval fight the flagship with its blue ensign goes ahead rp a. river or' into a bay, its admiral standing in the shrouds watching, and giving orders. But I have to tell'yo’u, O veterans of the American navy, if you are as loyal to Christ as you were to the government, there is a. flagship sailing ahead of you of which Christ is -Lhc~ admiral. and he, watches from the shrouds. and the heavens are” the bluelensign, "and he leads you towardthe harbor, and all the. breadsidcs of earth and hell cannot ‘damage you, and ye whose garments Were once red with your own blood shall have a. robe washed and made white in the blood of the Lamb. Then strike eight bells! High noon in. hvziven! - - While we are heartil‘y‘ greeting and banqueting the sailor patriots just now returned 'u'e' must not' forget the veterans of the navy now in marine hospitals or spending their old’days in their OVHl or their chil- dren’s honesteads. 0 ve \eterans, I charge you bear up under the aches and Weaknesses that \ou still carry from the war times. You are not as stalwart as you would have been but for that nervous strain andfor that? terrific exposure. Let every ache gnd pain, instead otdepresâ€" sing. remind you of your fidelity. The sinking of the Weehawken off Mosris Island, Dec. 6, 186:, was a mystery. She was not under‘iire. The sea was'not rough. But Admirâ€" al Dahlgren from the deck of the flag steamer Philadelphia saw her gradually sinking. and finally she struck the ground, but the flag still floated above the wave in the sight of the shipping. It. Was afterward found that she sank from weakness through injuries in previous service. Her plates had been knocked loose in previous times. So you have in nerve and muscle and ditnned eye- sight and difficult heating and short- ness of breath mam intimations that you are gradually going d0\\11.It is the service of many years ago that is telling on 3011.13.- of good cheer. We ou'e vou just as much as though your lifeblood had gurgled through the scuppers oi the ship in the Red River expedition or as though you had gone down with the Melville oil Hatteras. (lnly keep your flag flying, as did the illus- trious Weehawken. Hood cheer, my boys! The memory of man is poor, and all tnat talk about the country never forgetting those who fought for it is an untruth. It does forget. Witness how the Veterans Sometimes had to turn the hand organs on the street to get thier families a lixing. \iitness how rutlila-sslx some 01' them 1 were turned out. of oiliCc that some ‘liloat of :1. polithinn might take their place. Witness the filt‘l. that there is not a man or \\'()1!lilll now under 45 years of 13c ‘1 ho has any full appreciation of the {our years’ martyrdom of 181;] to 1515.7. inclu- six-e. But. while men may forget, God never forgets. l1» renn-mhers the swinging hnmznotk. lli- rennem- hers the forecastle. lie remeinlmrs the frozen ropes of that January 1' mpest. He remembers the amputa- tion without, sullieient Min-1'. lie re- members it all ll‘Jilt‘r than you re- memher it. and in some shape re- “11rd will he gixen. God is the best of all payniasters. and for those who do their~ whole duty to him and the world the pension awarded is an everlasting heaven. Sometimes oil the eons! of ling,- land the royal family lime inspected them for that. purpose. in the, Bal- tic sea the Czar and ('xnrinn hou- re- viewcd the Russian navy. To bring before the American people the debt they owe to the navy I go out with you On the Atlabiti" ()1'1'1111. “he‘i‘e there is plenty of room. and in imagination review the “or shipâ€" ping of our {our great conflictsâ€"â€" 1776. 1812, 1865'» and 18118. Swing into line all ye frigates. ironelads. tire rafts, gunhonts and 111e11-ot‘-â€"\\'ar! There they come. all so i1 set and all humans in full blast, sin-ores of eryâ€" stal tossing "from their cutting prows. That is the Delaware. an old Revolutionary craft. eoninmnded by Commodore Decatur. Y onder goes the Constitution. Commodore Hull commanding. 'l‘here is the. Chesapeake, commanded liy t'nptain Lawrence, \thSe dying \vords were, “Don’t give up the ship." 11nd the Niagara. of 1812. commanded by (fmnmndorc Parry. win» \xi-mi- (m Ihc hack of an old li-Mm'. l‘i-slinu‘ «m his navy (3:11). “We huw- mm thi- win-11w, and they are ours." \‘nmim- is the flagship Wabash. Admiral lmpimt commanding; yonder thi- flagship Minnesota, Admiral (‘nirixlmi'uug‘h cmnmnnrling; ymidvr. ”I“ flagship Philadelphia, Admiral l’:lllif_"l‘t'ii(’¢‘nl- “landing; yonder, Llw flagship San Jacinto, Admiral Buiivy mmmmnd- 113g; yonder, the flagship Black Hawk. Ahmiral Pnrtm' (-mnmumiingl yonder. the flag stimuli-1' vaim. :‘xd- miral Footc comm:.mdin:.:': .VUHdUr, the flagship Hartford, Hamid G. Farragut commanding; ynndur. the Olympia, Admiral. Dummy command- ing; 'yondor, the ()rugnn. (‘umuin Clark commanding: yonder, the Texas. Captain'l‘milip cummumling: yonder, the New 'Ym‘k, ib-ur-Mhuir- al Sampson commanding: ymidi-r. the Iowa, Captain {oblvy D. livams commanding. All those of you who ‘eru in the naval service during 1})(3\\'ul‘nf1.\'65 are now in the th'nnm) (u' M'vning' of life. With some of you it is 13 o'clock, 3 o'clock, 4 u'clm-k, 6 'elock, and it will. soon lw sunâ€" ' wn. If you Were 01‘ ngv “'th tho. War broke out, you are n'uw m. 1("dSt 60. Many Of You have. pn'ssvd into the sepenties. While in our ('ubun War there were more Christian rumâ€" manders on sea and land than in any previous aonflfct, I would rm'iw- in your minds the fact that, at. least. two great admirals of the civil war were Chrisfiians, Eooto and t-‘uvm- gutf’i‘lad the ChriSLiun religion Leon ’a cowardly thing 11105; Would u“: THE WATCHMAN-WARDER: LINDSAY. 0N1 had fiothing to do with it. In its faith ithe'y'fl‘ived and died.";-In Brook'â€" 1yn navy Vyand Admiral F0068 field praye‘r' meetings and conducted a. re- vival on the receiving ship North Carolina afid on. Sabbaths, far: out at sea, followed the, chaplain With reli- gious exhortation. In early. life, nhnard the sleep-of-vmr Natchez, im- (11-..:nfi-Inn gious exhornauuu. aboard the sleepâ€"of- pressed by the won sailor, he gave his two Weeks to the end of that declared forth, under all circ good to me.” Who: ven, he did not ban According to his own statement. Farragut was very loose in his mo- rals in early manhood and Qtacticed all kinds of sin. One day ‘he was called into the cabin of his father, who was a shipmaster. His father said, “David, what are you going to be: anyhow?" He anSWcre'd, ”1 am going to follow the sea.” “Follow the sea," said the father, “and he‘ kicked about the world and die in a 1 foreign hospital?" “No," said Daâ€"i vid; “I am going to command like you.” “No,” said the father; ”a boy of your habits will never command anything.” And his father burst inâ€" to tears and left the cabin. From that day~David Farragut started on a new life. Captain Pennington, an honored elder of my Brooklyn church, was with him in most of his battles and had his intimate friendship, and be confirmed, what I had heard else- where, that Earragut was good and )lgristian. In every great crisis of life he asked and obtained the Di- vine direction. When in Mobile Day the monitor Tecumseh sank from a. torpedo and the great Warship Brooklyn, that was to lead the. squadron, turned back, he said he was at a loss to know whether to advance or retreat, and he says: "I prayed. '0 God, who created man and gave him reason, direct me what to do. Shall I go on?’ And a \‘OiCu commanded me, ‘Go on,’ and I “em, on." Was there ever a more tout-h- ing Christian letter than that which he wrote to his wife from his flag:- ship Hartford? “My dearest wife. I write and leave this letter for you. I am going into Mobile Bay in the morning if God is my leader. and I hope he is. and in him I place my trust. If he thinks it is the proper place for me to die. I am ready in submit to his will in that. as all other things. God bless and pre- serve you, my darling. and my dear boy, if anything should happen to me. May his blessings rest upon you and your dear mother." Cheerlul to the end, he said on board the Tallapoosa in the last. voyage he ever took. “It, Would be Well if I died now in harness." The sublime Episcopal service for the (lead was never more approIn-iately rendered than over his casket. and Well did all the forts of New York harbor thunder as his body \Vais brought to the Wharf. and We” did the minute guns sound and the bells 1011 as in a procession Jiaving in its ranks the president of the I’niind Ztatos and his cabinet and the mighty men of land and sea, the old admiral was carried, amid hundreds of thousands of uncovered heads on Broadway. and laid on his pillow of dust in beautiful \l'oodlawn. Sept 30, amid the pomp of our autumnal forests. _.___â€"â€"-.-- Oh, while old ocean’s breast ‘Bears 3. white salil And God’s soft, stars to rest. Guide through the gale, Men will him ne’er forget, Old heart of oakâ€"â€" Farragut, Farragutâ€"â€" Thunderbolt; stroke! But just as much am I stirred at the scene on warship's deck beforc Santiago last summer, when thv \ic- tor}r grained for our American “at: over Spanish oppression the captain took off his hat and all the sailors and soldiers did the some and sillet- ly they ofl'orod thanks to Almighty God for what, had been accmnplishvd, and when on another ship tho x01- «liars and sailors wvru choc-ring us :1 Spanish \‘L'SSCI sank and its ”Hm-rs and crews were struggling in 1,!111\\u- u-rs and the captain of our Warship cried out. “Don't cheer; the 1101111111)- lows are drowning." Prayers on 11111111! Prayers in the fnr1.1(‘z1511(1! Prayers in the cabin! Prayers in 11111 hannnocks! Prayers on the louknuL at midnight! The hattlcs of that “111' opened with 11mv111' were 11115111111 (111 with prayer and closed with 11111151111, and toâ€"day the American nation re- calls them with prayer. We hail with thanks the new genâ€" eration of naval heroes, those of the year 1898. We are. too near their marvelous deeds to fully nppw-i-iulv them. A century from now poetry and sculpture and pain-ting and his- tory will do them better junk-e. than we can do them now. A defeat at Manila would have been an inliu- ito disaster. Foreign nations not. overfond of our American institu- tions would have joined the other Side, and the war so many months post would have been raging still. und' perhaps a. hundred thousand {Ira-Yes would have opened to lake down our slain soldiers and sailors. It took this country three yours to get over the. disaster at Bull Run at. the opening of the civil war. How many years it would have required to recover from a defeat at Manila in the opening of the Spanish War I «ammt say. God averted the (al.1- miw lW-giving triumph to our mny undfi‘l‘ Admiral Dewey, whose coming: up through the Narrows of Now York; harbor 6av before yesterday “as greeted by the nation “hose welcoming cheers will not reuse in ”80de until tb-morro“, and next day in the mpital of the nation tho Ewe-led sword voted bv (mieress shall be presented amid boomlnrr ‘cannonade and embannercd hf?! A sharp pencil is,surc to make its mark'in the war“. SCHOOLS HEâ€"UPENING Rigg s 0P3 cm CPR cm 0P3 'cpn 0P3 0P8 CPR CPR CPR CPR CPR CPR CPR Commencing THURSDAY, MAY 11th. will run on the following time-table until fur- ther notice : Lave COBOCO‘KK ............... 6.40 am. “ FENELON FALLS............8.45 - “ “ STURGEON PO!NT.........9.16 “ Arrive LINDSAY (new wind). .. ..10.30 “ Leave LINDSAY .................. 3.00 pan. Arvive STURGEON POINT" . . . ...4.15 “ “ FENELON FALLS ......... 4.45 “ “ COBOCONK ................ 6.30 “ “Kawartha Lakes” “ MAPLE LEAF ” Coboconk to Linduy.... ...... . Coboconk to Fenelon Fwd .......... Rooedde to Fenelon Falls ........... Pension F3113 to S_mrgeon Point ..... Fcnelon F1133 to Linda} ........ um-r. n-.- 7..-- __ __ Freight sud parcels writ; Stilowwntes. Favorable terms tar small excunlon parties to any point. on route. For further inxormstion apply to Trent Valley Navigation Go. “Kawartha Lakes” Big variety to choose from at will mu Single Trips a follow: :â€" Leavc Bobcaygeon It. . . .. .......... 8.00 mm. Arrive at dudm tt .............. 10.80 mm. THE -â€"PL\'1NG BET\\'EENâ€" Bobcaygeon, Lindsay and Stur- geon Point be made with (he Uaspuiu for ailing n. my point. on the Lake (or gruu. J. W. DIAMENT, Cam‘- Bobcaygeon, Single Return I have made smngomenu for placing en unlimited quwtity ol Imus on Farm Prflpotty“ Five end 51: Per Cent. interest. All Leena um be put. throusu mm the lean: poaxble delay end exponent. -w-â€" â€" wuâ€" vvvuuv- or execs. limb! Worry. 130.35% use 01 TO' mean. Opium or sun . Mailed on receiv‘ alpine.“ mu. .5. WWW ck ma can. nnphlem tree to 31133661» noes. ‘ '1‘!» Wood Camp-y. W €130!» 0“ â€" E- 'V.» ( ’S‘Phes ?h: t Q.!§ £.ld i. L LAC": It, by Steamer win all It guy huffing vhcn :icgaued. SIN GLE TRKPS On and after MONDAY. OCT. 2nd, the ”21W ‘ Wood’s Phosphodine. GRAIN CAR RYING.-:Arnlgemantts‘ can ; RIGGS, SEASON OF 1899. Steamship Express. due to leave Tn- rnnm at l 30 p..m will be WITH- DRAWN. and 'Cwndnn Pacz fic Upper uke Steamship vi“ be DISCONTINUED for sea- san 1899. They wtll be runtor freight CPR traffic until furthet notice. -â€"-Readors â€"â€"Copy Books, â€"â€"Dra.wing Books â€"7Scribblers â€"â€"Slates â€"-â€"Lea.d Pencils. -â€"-Pens â€"-Ink sâ€"Envelopes â€"â€"Writing paper â€"â€"Lock Boxes â€"â€"Rulers -â€"Rubber-Eraers «Pen Holders Stare is well supplied with new 'books such as; Kent-st. Lindsay MONEY TO LOAN WITHM AWN THE FAST STEAMER PASSENGER SERVICE SCHEDULE OF FARES= CAPT. 1. D. VARCOE. \ ownsn, Lmnsn P.O. After Saturday, Sept. 20th, The Great English Rented . 6 Sold and recommended bx; all 6111331” mom-(h. Onl reu- tblo medlclne discove . Sim Weed to can all Wemens. all ofiects of spine TURION GEO. TAYLOR. Cloth of Vamhm. Babes: goon (LIMITED) Return Simle Return 70!: $1 00 l6 6‘ CPR 50c. 750. $1 .00 CPR CPR CPR CPR CPR CPR CPR DK E. A. Ton]; namusr, 7 Graduate of Tom nto Uni 0‘ Dent}! Suxgeo“ thy m Every enactment. of den and odentlflc manner “5th (Ion. °"°' “WET” ”mg 8m. m: .‘_-‘L_ Extract-teeth Without pain by 9;“ Idministered by him for 253'“!!sz He Mi“ the m nude ll 'Dr 0mm mm. Neelmds thatbe by I“: M417 mm Without an “Cidu I mthebest loos} pdn 00111:: h ‘mwd before coming. 0m“ . the Simpson Rouge, Linda}.- ZDEI\‘5"]?IS1 successes to THE LATE lanbe: of Toronto Dental 005 University. A130 gndum (I A Host Modem Dentistry m adentificmuner. Crown and Bridge Work a m‘ Charges moderate. U and residence north-4 Mbfldgem Telephone El. U of Toronto L nixersitv mi gndmte of Trinity Unixetsity, Term: of Cullege of thsicmns sad Saul Office South-em corner Lindsyn‘lh Telephone 107 .â€"-23 1;. U to Gaol and Surgeon to (it! District. Ofioe hour: 10 to 12mm 8 p.m. Residence 30 Wellington m No. 43. U 8.0. Ofice and residuum and Russell m Licemiae u Physician and Surges-us, Eimhui. Hidwifcry Edinbunh. Special fl \bdwifcry wd diseases 0! was. 1 98.â€":'.li.flly u Ofioe and residence. Basal: and door west 0! York-st. 015022191 10.30 3.1114130 p.m. to 3 p.m., and? J. SIXPSON, grad-43:2 d Cn'rm Tom Medial Coilege of Physic Ont. Law of Bockwood Asyhm. i Trunk Surzmn, 14:16.53)“ Duck 1 U“ Solicitor m the 0mm Inn at Lowest ExteS. 0330: ."a south. 6. ll. BOPKISS DR SIMPSON, PET MM and nach‘HanM Run!" “’ Solicitor. etc. ‘ Clerk 0! the Peace. )1! Block. foot of lien: Street tely op mite th: 1 JOHN XCS WEYN MCSVV EYN Bamcters. SO Bunk. Kent-EL. lowest mes. BISTERS. Hamilton's Black. To LOAN a ver: a. J. KENNY. DENTIST. KE\.\Y 1239'”: RS. L"; MID. Hammers. w- and Fonetou Na. uudfl)" ' gluon! K J. McLAUGHLIN .1 at G" I TO'"! Pr McLAUGHLI\ M l D. summers 3“ 'L an» v. D" 3 run "' A“ M w.‘" an '. STEWART. TEWART 8: DENTIST, . ARTHUR DAY .. A. E. VROOMM .. JEFFERS. sns . A. GI LLESPIEC PIDEVLIN, BA W H ITE, GRADES Barristers 1891 w “At flarristcrs, s I E: 5i Bhpsirians HOPK >5, Solicitors. 3‘- 0 D11: House. my Noumea OFFICE PKIXS ,v W. , . - 3" deal? tins dxsta fish the ma WELDOE Ida?! n' 90wa I» FRESH" {From his most Before you the: contest U) grabbing. N a charge t1; stubbornnes to-rthis as t4 “e'. “upland “uderne"- not the WI) merely am .nd ViCiC make ‘0‘; If our 70“ are 11 God w to the den' BY gememb we wan t no!“ country a! repubf ‘3' are: citizen vicic l. promi

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy