NOVEMBER 7TH, 1899 am INSURANCE! â€"-â€"- WHEN RIQHTEOUSNESS REIGNS DE- SCRIBED BY DR. TALMAGE. b ,suraflce effected on Town, Vil- R , . Iagcand Farm Fromm EVOLUTIONIZED FOR GOOD. I: A Tonic for the Weary and Heartworn in the Struggle to Better the Condi- tions of Themselves and Their Fellow- meu - \Vhat Will Oglu ï¬rst-Glass GOIlIDallIBS RGDI’BSBDIBII Happen on the “for-id’s Complete Gospelizatlon. . ""__ Washington, Dec. 3.â€"By a novel ‘ . t L No Solicitors’ mode Dr. Talmage in this discourse D, I HOBBY 0 outn'gees or shows how the world will look af- ,-/~ #17:: omnussion ter it. has b . ' 1 ' ' ‘ I. / ecn reyo utionized for , HOUSE good; text, II Peter iii, 13, "Anew earth, ness. ’ ’ Down in the struggle to make the world better and happier we some- times get depressed with the obâ€" stacles to be overcome and the work to be accomplished. Will it not be a tonic and an inspiration to look at the world as it will be when it has been brought back to . ~ I I T VIBIUHa Loan and paradisaical condition ‘3 So let us 3 I for a few moments transport our- ~ selves into the future and put our- SAVINGS COMPANY selves forw-ard in the centuries and wherein dwelleth righteous- see the world in its rescued and per- fected state, as we will see it if in those times we are permitted to re- visit this planet, as I am sure we will. We all want to see the world after it has been thoroughly gospel- ized and all wrongs have been right- ed. We. will want to come back, and . I , ‘10\EY§TOILOAN We will come back to look upon the .; :3v: and farm property at13urrent rates of refulgent consummation toward ‘<:er:s:- Costs moderate, and no delay. “Inch “0 havebeen on larger or - smaller scale. telling. Having heard the opening of the orchestra on . whose stri..i:s some discords travelâ€" Savmgs Department ed. we will want to hear the last triumphant bar of the perfected oraâ€" torio. Having seen the picture as I the painter first drew its outlines, :3 upon canvas, we will want to see it cut. when it is as. complete as Reuben's o "Descent from the Cross." Angelo’s “Last Judgment." Having seen the world under the gleam 0f . the star of Bethlehem, we will want. rm to see it when, under the full shin- .l Ollll NIOQWOOII) Jamï¬s Low. ing-of the sun of righteousness, the towers shall strike 1.2 at noon. President Secretary There “-111 be nothing in that com- ; â€10-- ing century of the world's perfection to hinder our terrestrial visit. Our I pone; andb velocity 'of1 locoimottilon .« lll say Maihle WfllIS news... ROBT. CHAMBERS It will not take us long to come â€cur-2.1 :3 furnish the meal of Li'idny and sur- hcre. however far off in (lod’s uni- verse heaven may be. The Bible . unis-4 country with MONUIIEXI‘S and:HEAD- declares that such visitatiOn is going 7' SI 0555, bOLh Marble and Granite. , ilead Ofï¬ce, LINDSAY, ONT. ‘ Debentures issued for periodsfof from one to ’or sums of $100 and upwards. . ('27 ""I U? H so D 0.. ï¬ 'U 8 so "I Q; 0". w W‘ G D U 3 7:; E" on now. “Are they not all ministerâ€" ing spirits sent forth to minister to those who shall be heirs of salvaâ€" tion?" Surely the gates of heaven will not be bolted after the world is Edenized so as to hinder the rw deemed from descending for a tour of inspection and congratulation and triumph. I imagine that. we are descending I Estimates pro nptly given on all kinds of cemetery lieu-ole Table Tops, Wash Tops, Mantle Pieces, etc., :pecial‘.y. . .Seinz .i prarinl workmm, all should see his igns and c0 npire prices before purcnaslng ,else- , ere. . .. WORK ; â€"Ir~. the resr of the Market. on Cinbnige- VJPPJfle “he Picxinghouse- at that period of the world's comâ€" - lete U“os‘ielizatiou. There will be ‘ ROB-E. CHAMBERS 11:0 perhil iIn such a (lesccut. Great 8 “fl heights and depths have no alarm a ‘ for glorified spirits. We can come down through chasms DCLVVCE‘D. , v . B. weldon worlds without growing dizzy and across'the spaces of half the. uniâ€" V'erse without losing our way. Down and farther down we Come. As we approach this world we breathe the E 4 ‘ MARIPOSA TOWNSHIP CLERK. ittle Britain, = Ont. comets“ _ , . perfume of illimitable gardens. 5133:? Agent for the ‘0“0‘mg meames‘ Alighted on the reducinl‘d earth. we - LINDSAY I. ELâ€"The North American. . are first accosted by the spirit of 3’ I: «The Gore HUNG-1, The Eqmty, the twentyâ€"first century, who pro- 3 I .CI‘JI’la Farmers’ Mutual Insurance Co. \o 5-3! of Marriage Licenses Conveyancing in all it’s forms poses to guide and show us all that We desire to see. Without his guidâ€" ance, we would lose our way, for the world is so much changed from the time when we lived in it. First t Oakwood â€" Monday, -- *po ""'" . . of all, he points out to us a group .ECQESda-Y and Fnda’Y' of abandoned buildings. We. ask ~ . ._ .. â€" . this spirit of the twentyâ€"first cenâ€" ' tury, “What are those structures MISS A. GLENDENAN’ whose Walls are fal'ï¬ng down and whose gates are rusted on the Gambray, 0'“ ’ hinges ‘3†Our eSCort tells us: “Those †'UFESSMNAL NURSE were once penitent iaries filled with .'.§¢" . -‘ , cert rriï¬iuate of W. H. and M. Hospitals, '1 i has died out." After passing on and statues erected in amid columns offenders, but the crime of the world w rk ; a so S. C. H., Toronto. Reason- memory of erasâ€"3,74. those who have been mighty for ‘ "h ' ‘ ‘ ' ' goodness in the world's history. the , highest and the most exquisitely I . Per cent. sculptured thOSt‘ in honor of such as have been most effectual m sav- ing life or improving life rather than thbse renowned for destroying life, we come upon another group of buildings that must have been transâ€" formed from their original shape and adapted to other uses. “What is all this‘3"we ask our escort. He answers: "Those were almshouscs ' ,;:‘.»:rsigned is prepared to loan money I - 11:; 1:2;unts on good Farm or Town Pro- L t-;.' ;'_’{ per cent. per annum. Srnaller ' :3 â€ightly increased rates. I. E. WELDON. \ and hospitals, but accuracy in I 3.33:7; '1', 31C" Hamilton’s Block, Lindsay. making and prudence in running maâ€" . PI: ,nemec every Monday.-â€"37. chinery of all: sorts havenlmost - €15 ~ abolished the IlSI. of cas1.ialtics.and a " sobriety and industry have nearly ' abolished pauperism, so that those PJIANCY To LOAN buildings which were once hospitals ‘ ' U ‘1‘ and almshouses have been turned 0r ' -: -.‘1-‘:a.rr1m:ement310r placmgan unlimited mto beautiful homes f01 the It s prosperous, and if you will look in vou will see the poorest table has abundance, and the smallest ward- robe luxury, and the harp, waiting to have its strings thrummcd,lean- ing against the piano, waiting for its keys to be fingered.†And . we. believe what our savs. for as we. pass on we ï¬nd hchlfh glowing in every check and beaming in every eye and springing ' e'Vcry step and articulating in GEO. TAYLOR. Clerk of Verulam, Bobm: goon 1 s31! . 1 Etitj .' l.“ftll3 on Farm Property at Five and Six be C82: interest. All Loans will be put through . It: nus: P053104: delay and â€(paw escort “ The Great English Remedy. n ’3 2': Sold and recommended by all " ~ iruggists in Canada. On] reli- m £351" medicine (2350332311.; if: every utterance, and you and I ' igf‘xyiï¬wgï¬egss £712 eï¬ects of abuse whisper to each other as our es- 1 Worry Excessive use ofTo- cort has his attention drawn to some new sunriSe -xpon the morning skv. and we say. each to the other: "‘Who would believe that this is the. world we lived in over 100 years ago '3 Look at those men and we- men we pass on the road ! How 1mâ€" proved the human race ! Such beauty,, such strength, such gracefulâ€" ness, such geniality !. Faces With- out the mark of one sorrow! Cheeks ' seem never to have been wet hrylathne tear ! A race sublimated! A new world born l" . But I say to‘ our escort: “Did all this merely happen so ? Are all the good here spontaneously good? How did you‘ get the old sh1pwrecked world afloat again, out of the break- ers into the smooth seas ‘3†‘ No, no !." responds our twenty-ï¬rst cen- tury. escort. “Do you see those tow- m2 Those on the towers of church. ' ., .,. q - _ Mailed on receipt - ,1 . timulants will F l’h~);nha'e is sold in Lindsay by urnggist. A . :l’ mint; in ()i'im'io'.the Neill" “1:1,, Bazxsh Columbia. Full mformallcn GEO. WILDER, ExI>ress Ofï¬ce, Lindsay \ WORLD AS IT WILL BE cs, towers- of reformatory l l l I ' l l or Michael ' ' piety a; for science. institu- tions, towers of Christian schools. Walk with me, and let us enter some of these temples.†We enter, and I ï¬nd that the music is in the major key and none of it in the minor. “Gloria In Excelsis†rising above “Gloria In Excelsis.†Tremolo stop in the organ not so much used "as the trumpet stop. ‘More. of Ariel than of Naomi. More chants than dirges. . But I say to our twenty-ï¬rst cen- tury escort: “I cannot understand .his. Have these worshippers‘no sor- rOWS, or have they forgotten their sorrows ‘3†Our escort responds : “Sorrows! Why, they had sorrows more than you could count, but by a. divine illumination that the eigh- teenth and nineteenth Centuries never enjoyed they understand the uses of sorrow and are comforted with a supernatural condolence such as prc~ vious centuries never experienced.†I ask again of the interpreter, “Has death been banished from the World?†The answer is, “No, but people die now only when the phy- sical machinery is worn out, and they realize it is time to go and that they are certainly. and without doubt going into a world where they will be inï¬nitely better off and are to live in a mansion that awaits their immediate occupancy.†“But how was all this effected ‘3†I ask our escort. Answer : “‘By floods of gospel power. You who lived in the nineteenth century never seen a revival of religion to be compared with what occurred in the latter part of the twentieth and the early part of the twentyâ€"first century. The prophecy has been fulfilled that ‘a nation will be born in a day’ that is, ten or twenty or forty mil- lion of people converted in :Z-l hours. In our church history we read of. the great awakening of 1857, when ï¬ve hundred thousand souls were saved. But that was only a drop of the coming showers that since then took into the kingdom of God everything between the Atlantic and the Paciï¬c, between the Pyrenees and the Himalayas.’ The evils that good people in the nineteenth century Were trying to destroy have been over- come by"~ celestial forces. What huâ€" man weaponry failed to accomplish has been done by omnipotent thun- der-bolts. “O spirit of the twenty-first cenâ€" tury, will you not show us some- thing of the commercial life of your time?†He answers, “To-morrow I will show you all." And on the morâ€" row he takes us through the great marts of trade and shows us the bargain makers and the? shelves on which the goods lay and the ticrccs and hogsheads in which they are contained. “I notice that the fabrics are of better quality than anything I ever saw in our nineteenth centu- ry, for the .actories are more skill- ful, and the wheels that turn and the looms that clack and the en- gines that: rumble are driven by forces that \\ ere not a century ago discovered. The prices of the fabrics indicate a reasonable profit, and the firms in the counting room and the clerks at the counter and the draymen at the doorway and the errand boy on his rounds and the nn-ssenger who brings the mail and the men who open the store in the morning as well as thosr». who close it at night all look as if they were satisfied and well treated. No swallowing up of small houses of merchandise by great houses, no ruinous unders'elling un- til those in the same line are bankâ€" rupt and then the. prices lifted, no unnecessary. ussignnuxnt to defraud creditors, no overâ€"drawing of ac.â€" counts. no abscondings, no sharp practice, no snap judgments, but the manufacturer right in his dealings with the wholesaler. and the wholeâ€" saler with the retailer, and the re- tailer with the customer. “But what is yonder row of buildâ€" ings, majestic for architecture 3’ The spirit of the twentyâ€"first century says, “Those are our legislative halls and places of public trust, and if you would like it I will show you the political circles, the modes of preferment, the styles of election, the character of public men in this century.†“Thank you,†I rep,y. "I can easily understand how gos- pelization Would improve individual life and social life, and commercial life, but I would like to see what it can do for political life.†“Let me tell you,†says the Spirit of the twenty-first century, â€that I have read about political chicanery and corruption of more than 100 years ago-â€"the nineteenth century,in which you lived hereâ€"but the low political caucus has gone from the face of the earth, and the stuffed ballot box, and the bribery by money and by promise of ofï¬ce, and the jobs got through legislatures and congresses by lobbyists.†l l l Inot to be built of arbitration, for it is almost there is no GOd' \vasburieo halt a century ago withour, any liturgical sex-Vice." 4‘ ' ‘ Well,†I say to our escort, “where are Tom Paine’s ‘Age of Rea- son’ and Ingersoll’s . ‘Mistakes of Moses’ and David aHume’s and Volâ€" taire’s celebrated tirades against the heard of them,†says Our escort. “What are vou talking about? A bigger bonfire; of books than that which in apostolic 'time was kindled in the streets of l Ephesus was lighted in all our cities and the corrupt literature of the world turned into aShes many, manv years ago. I saw the last leaf curl up in the flame and scatter.†In response to my question as to what had wrought all this changeâ€" obliterated all the evil and fully inâ€" augurated all the goodâ€"our escort, the spirit of the twenty-ï¬rst cen- tury, tells me that gospelization had directly or indirectly done it. It Was a practical gospel that not only changed the heart, but made the man honest. A practical religion which did not expend all its energy in singing, “Fly abroad, thou mighty gospel,†but gave something to make it fly. The good work was helped on by the fact that it became a general habit ameng millionaires and multi- millionaircs to provide churches and schools and institutions of mercy. after the testators were dead, but built so that they might be present at the laying of the cornerstone and at the dedication and leave less heirsâ€"atâ€"law to prove in orphans’ court that when the testators made, their last will and testament they were crazy. The telegraphic wires in the air and the cables under the sea thrill with Christian invitation. I’honographs charged with gospel sermons stand in every neighbor- hood. The 5,000,000,000 Of the world's inhabitants in that century are 5,000,000,000 disciples. 7 “But,†I'say to our escort, the spirit of the twenty-ï¬rst century, “you have shown us much, but what about international conditions? When we lived on earth, it was a century that bled with Marengo and Chalons and Lodi Bridge and Luck- now and Solferino and Leipsic and Waterloo and San Juan.†Our esâ€" cort replies, “(Some with me to this building of white marble and glitterâ€" ing dome.†As We pass up and on we are taken into a room where. the mightiest and best, representatives of all nations are assembled to settle international controversies. As we enter I hear the presiding oflicer opening the council of arbitration, reading the second chapter of Isaiah; "They. shall beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks. Nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more." Questions which in our long past nineteenth century caused quarrel and bloodshed, as when Germany and Franco were deciding about Al- sace and Lorraine, as When the United States and Spain were decidâ€" ing about Cubaâ€"such questions in this twenty-first century settled in five minutes, one drop of ink doing more than once Could have been ac- complished by a river of blood. But we cannot stay long in this time for us to retrace our way heaâ€" venward. This voluntary exile must, soon end. And, passing out of this hall of arbitration, We go through a national IIIIISUIIDI, where we are shown among the curiosities an linâ€" iield ride, a howithr, a I'lotchkiss shell, an ambulanceâ€"curiositics to that age, but, alas! no curiosity to us of the nineteenth century, for some of our own kindred went down under their stroke or were carried off the ï¬eld by those wheels. “But,†I say to our OSCort, the spirit of the twentyâ€"first century, and you and I say to each other, "we. must go home now, back again to heaven. We have stayed long enough. on this terrestrial visitation to see. that all the. best things foretold in tho Scriptures and which we read during our earthly residence have come to pass, and all the Davidic, Solomonic and Paulinian and Johannean proâ€" phecies have been fulfilled, and that the earth, instead of being a ghastly failure, is the mightiest suecess in the universe. A star redeemed. A planet resmied! A world saved! It started with a garden, and it is goâ€" ing to close with a garden. Faro- well, spirit of the twenty-ï¬rst cenâ€" tury! Thanks for your guidancld We can stay no longer away from the doxologics that never end. in temples never closed, in a day that has no sundoyvn. We. must report to the immortals around the throne. the. transformations we have seen, the victories of truth on land and 55011. the hemispheres irradiated, and Christ on the throne of earth, as be As in company with our escort we" is on the throne of heaven.†pass down from the heights on which these buildings stand I see a diSmount‘ed cannon planted on the side of the hill, and I go to examine it, and I read the inscription, cut in letters of break: “This is the last gun that was ï¬red in the last bat- tle of the last war that will ever be fought. Presented by the last regi- ment of war just disbanding. Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will to men.†Then I look up, and our escort says: “Do you see that large structure on our right? That was a fortress, but new it is a college, and instead of guns holes are aiming out of the. port . looking the students of a higher literature and a wiser science and a grander civilization than the world ever before imagined. And those students are taught by a pro- fessorat‘c of men as renowned for Archaeologist’s hammer and geologists crowbar and chemist’s laboratory and explorcr’s journey have joined in a conï¬rma- tion of the truth of the Holy Scrip- tures until there is not an unbelievâ€" er in all the earth. The astronomer through his telescope has seen the morning star of the Redeemer, .and the geOIOgist has found the Rock of Ages, and the geometrician has de- monstrated that heaven is the city. which ‘1ieth four square, and the length and the breadth and the height of it are equal.’ †“What,†I say to our escort, “no skeptics, n'o inï¬dels. no agnostics?" His reply is: “Absolutely none. The last fool who 'said in. his heart l i “In that world We have just visitâ€" and with ed the deserts are all abloom, the. wildernesses are bright fountains. Sin is extirpated. Crime is reformed. . Disease is cured. The. race is emancipated. ‘The earth is full of the knowledge of God, as the waters cover the sea.’ ‘The redeemâ€" ed of the L0rd.ha\'e come to Zion with songs and everlasting joy. upon their heads.’ ‘The Lord God Omni- potent reigncth, and the Kingdoms of the world have become the kingâ€" doms of our Lord Jesus Christ.’ Let lthc harpers of.heaVen strike the glad tidings from the strings of their harps, and the trumpeters put them in the mouth of their trumpets. and the orchestras roll them into the grand march of the eternities. and all the cathedral towers of the great capital of the universe chime them all over heaven." But often~ you and I, who were Companions in that expedition from heaven to earth, seated on the green bank of the river that rolls through the paradise of God, will talk over the scenes we witnessed in that pa- renthesis of heavenly bliss, in that vacation from the skies, in our terâ€" restrial visitationâ€"-we who were early residents in the nineteenth cen- tury, escorted by the spirit of the twenty-first century, when we saw what my text describes as “a new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousâ€" ness.†“Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost, as it was in the beginning, is new and ever shall be, and. Amen." ' O inducement for the' world without * Rigg’s Stcre is well supplied with new books such as: â€"Rea.ders â€"â€"Copy Books. â€"Dra.wing Books â€"Scribblers â€"Slates â€"Lea.d Pencils â€"â€"Pens -â€"Ink -Envelpes ~Writing paper â€"â€"Lock Boxes -â€" ...ulers â€"â€"Rubber-Eraers â€"Pen Holders Big variety to choose from at J. RIGGS, Kent=st. Lindsay _..-‘._._,_ __ . ._ CANADIAN *‘ - 13Acmc y, l Tourist 23 A fully eqmpped 8 Tourist Sleeper car. 2 runs through to Ocean Vanc0uver, to o leaving Toronto Ocean. :2 at 2.00 pm. 969898335“ Tuesdays and Saturdays, and to Seattle, leav- ing North Bay at 10.30 pm, Thursdays. Any Canadian Paciï¬c Agent will gladly rive you further particulars and secure you accommodation in one of these Care. A. H NOTMAN, Assistant General Passenger Agent, 1 King-st. East, Toronto T. C. Matchett, Agent D.P.R- DFFIDE - -' - KENT STREET ‘S‘WKawartâ€"ha. Lakes†SEASON OFé I 899. THE ï¬r"! JM‘JfE'ï¬il‘Z‘a â€": Trent fall y N (LIMITED) SI N GLE TRIPS On and after MONDAY. OCT. 2nd, the ESTURION? -â€"PLYING BETWEEN- ' Bobcaygeon, Lindsay and Stur- geon Point w.ll run Single Trips as follows :-' Leave Bobcaygeon at. . . .. .......... 8.00 mm. Arrive at. Lindsay at .............. 10 30 am, Rmcnxme Wim. Leave Lindsay at .................. 3.00 p.m. arrive at Bobcaygeon at. . . . .. . . . . . .5.30 pm. Sturgeon POint, Single Fare, 35c. “ “ eturn “ 50c. Bobcaygeon, Single “ 750. “ etu rn “ $1.00 G RAIN CAR RYIN G.â€";Arranzemcnts can be made with the Captain for calling at any pomt on the Lake for grain. J, W. DIAMENT, Capt. MANSION HOUSE, Limsu, OPPOSITE-1775 MARKET UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT.â€"The under- signed respectfully informs the people of the County of Victoria and the travelling public generally, that he has leased. the ab: ve hotel for a term of years and has renovated and refurnished it throughout, making it one of the most comfortable stopping place to be found in Lindsay. Havmu been for a number .of years enquired in catering to die summer tourist tradein Bobcayzeon, my cuests may rely on the best service at. all tirm s, inc‘udiug a. good table“ The bar will be kept suoplied with good brands of IIQUOTS and cigars, and farmers and others Will ï¬nd first-clues accommodation f-r teams in the commodious yard and stables. A call will be appreciated. GARNER HUNTER. Proprietor. WANTEDâ€"SEVERAL PERSONS FOR DISTRICT omoe Managers in this sex tlon to â€IVES?“ me in their own and surrounding counties Willing to pay yearly $600, payable weekly: Desxrable employ- mént with unusual opportunities. References ex- change . Flnclowa self-addressed stamped envelope. S. A. PARK, 3‘30 Caxton Bull ling, Chicago-45. . SOPO- When it comes to healing up old running sores of long standing there is no remedy equal to Burdock Blood Bitters. I Bathe the sore Vith the B.B.B.â€" that relieves the local irritation. Take the B.B.B. internally that clears the blood of all impurities on which sores thrive. . Miss D. Melissa Burke, Grind- stone, Magdalen Islands, P.Q., says: - “It is with pleasure I speak in favor of B.B.B. which cured me Of a running sore on my Ie°°.- I consalted three doctors and they gave me salve to put on, but it did no good. Finally my leg became a. SOIld. running sore. ‘ In fact for nearly a. month I could not put my foot to the floor. . “I was advised to use 5.3.3. and did so. Three bottles healed up my leg en- tirely so that I have never been troubled with it since." . DENTIST, - ~ Member Royal Dents! College, Ont. Headquarter for Good Dentistryâ€"84. DR SUTTON, DENTIST - UNDSAY Honor graduate of Toronto University sud College of Dental Surgeons. All the 13 Royal method. adopted and prices moderate. m mm 0506 over And I: _29. arson Nugent'g, Opposite Velteh‘u DR E. A. TOTTEN DENHST. - LINDSAY Graduate of Toronto Universit of Dental Surgeons. y and no)“ College Every department of dentistry done in a practical and scientiï¬c mnner at moderate 0500 over Morgan’s Drug Storeâ€"17. prices. DR. F. A. WALTERS DENTIST. - llNDSAY Honor Graduate of Tor ate Uni Boyd College of Dental Surgeon; vanity “d All the latest and improved branches of dent yperlormed. Charges moderate, OFFICE OVGI'G a 8m .. msg#33533†r0. corner Kent and William DR. NEELANDS DENTIST. - - LINDSAY Extracts teeth without pain by Gas (Vltsllud Air) administered by him for 26 years with great mecca He studied the gun under Dr. Cotton, of New York the originator of gas for extracting teeth. Dr. Cotton writes Dr. Neelmds tint he has given the gas to 186,417 persons without an accident. Dr. Neehndu usesthebest local pain obtundera. Beautiful urti- llciul teeth inserted at moderate prices. Please send upostalcurd before coming. omce nearly opposite the Simpson House,- Llndsay. â€"-23 DR. ARTHUR DAY DENTIST SUGGESSOR TO THE LATE DR. HART m Member of Toronto Dental College and Toronto University. Also graduate of American Dent-.1 College. Most Modem Dentistry practised in the most scientiï¬c manner. Crown and Bridge Work a specialty. Charges moderate. OFFICEâ€"94 Kent Street iahpsuians DR. A. E. VROOMANâ€"Oï¬iEe and residence north-east co '* Cambridge-Btu. Telephone 61. me: P8332â€! DR. G. S. RYERSON, 60 COLLEGE:§T., TORONTO EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT SPECIALIST DR. JEFFERS. Ofï¬ce hours 9to 11 a.m.‘ 2 to 4pm.; 7 to 8 .m. Besi- deuee 30 Wellington, street. Telephone APO. 43. R. WHITE, GRADUATE OF of Toronto University Medical Faculty also graduate of Trinity University, Toronto. and hie'mber of College of Physicians and Surgeons. Ontario. Ofï¬ce South-east corner Lindsa and R ll , Telephone 101â€"23.] y, y 11896 streets, DR. A. GILLESPIE, CA. AND S.0. Oï¬ce and residnnee Corner of Lindsay and Russell streets. Licentiate of Royal College 0! Physreiaue and Surgeons, Edinburgh. Licentiate of Midvnfery, Edinburgh. Special attention given to ggxdvg'stery and diseases of women. Telephone 50. DR. SIMPSON, PHYSICIAN, Office and residence. Russel-st., Lindsay, sec- ond door west of York-st. Oï¬ce h 9 ms, 9.00 mm. to 10.30 9.111.; 1.30 p.111. to 3 p.m., and 7 to 8 p.111. DB. J. SIMPSON, graduate of Univ. of Trinity 061., Toronto Medical College of Physicians and Surgeons. Ont. Late of Bockwood Asylum, Kingston. Grand Trunk Surgeon, Lindsay District. Lindsesy, Febru. ary, 4th, 1891. ï¬arristrrs, 8.1:. ONALD R. ANDE R SON, D Banister, Solicitor. e. Office immediately opposite the Day Hence, Kent-st., Lindsay. D. R. ANDERSON. G. H. HOPKINS, Barrister. Solicitor for the Ontario Bunk. Money to Loan at Lowest Rates. Oflice No. 6 William Street south. G. H. BOPKIN S. A P. DEVLIN, BARRISTER, Solicitor, etc , County Crown Attorney, Clerk of the Peace. Mludsay. Oï¬ice, Block. foot of Kent Street. TEWART O’CONNOR.â€" Barristers, Notaries, etc. Ofï¬ce over Ontario Bank, Kent-st, Lindsay. Money to Loan at very lowest rates. T. STEWART. L. V. O’CONNOR, BA.) CORE JACKSONâ€"Bar- risters, etc. Solicitors for the County of Victoria and the Bank of Montreal. Money to loan on mortgages at lowest current rawe. Ofï¬ce Williamâ€"st, lindssy. F. D. MOORE. Keenan's ALEX. JACKSON MCLAUGH LIN MCDIAR- MID, Barristers, Solicitors, c. Linnea: and Panama Falls. Lindsay Office, baker‘s Block, Kent-st. We are leaning money on real estate ï¬rst mortgage In sums largepnd small, to suit borrowerl, on the but terms and at the very Interest. We do not lend on notes or chattel aamrity. R. J. MCLAUGHLIN F. A. MODIARMID gladionrrrs PETER BR OW N, Auctioneer, Oakwood P.(‘., (interimâ€"Farm stock and other side“i pron-pity attended to. Charges mod- erate. Sales can be arranged for at Trix. 3'. A’ICB- MAN Ofï¬ce. THOMAS SWAIN, 3E, Auc- Ontario. â€"- Sales ccndaetrd in any part of the (3.211;)? of Durham own immediate neigh- ienoed in all kinds of mercantile and stock sales. Terms reasonable. Also licensed to top nunip, uneer, Caesa'ea. P.()., as reasonably as in my boyhood. Exper conduct sales of all kinds in Naripoea‘ Correspondence answered promptly .â€"47- 1:. (flimsy to $11331 MONEY TO LOAN .â€" l have a large amount of funds for invest- ment on First Mortgages at the lowest rates. Terms to suit borrowers. D. R. ANDERSON ‘ 1‘) '- x‘r; .wwagswwmrtm . ~. :: lowert ates M ' ‘4} v our: 3.43. .s I 5: 335,“ 31. . s .. ~.~ \ . .mmrs»:j satay; ~" v l