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Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 6 Nov 1884, p. 7

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 tW PORT. 4ere ef bomba .nee a i con I i at """bardmen* to breafc if surroundina. ^»ei I «!• g* indeed i. "o^.the pri" laasian alone. "a la Odes.; antique" are lorgotten all raggy cburcb ffeepata, and exactly alike •n f.f aeeiog » into the town nstead of hia Jed custodian jressivenesa ii ible result of =ti character- ^ox.cal as the 5 not enough â-  is. indeed, «ch;but, in- into advanc* ng maasea ia evil day ig the old ruts in a* ill inhab- B same aboea le same dried «-dust, â- jrhioh days of Peter ant, in an age itill the same Irunken, good wo centuries I burrowing Cbersonesus rman valley, Kingiake, in atent hecauae zars for three uch m-iteriat rronght. The er of the iture and a lut a murmur hovel which middle agea,. waa before er him. Ta is like read- ard she miy ' advanced in when I saw 3od czarina" 3 indeed, as the "true ccnstructad rt from the the eastern across the " received a have more nuthfast of )pen3d up in ti?n of the ni the new r\nected tha pian. Along ius. another m the point ea of Azof, Ikavkpz, at ridge, and the rtiighty and Mount iaa track at v'lDcea with e Fonti Tif- ut to Raa- f Turkey in )ad " ij now 1 southward icre of the ilf seem? in iietit./ fiad' one's ayi among Huogary, a country word that i'au spoken station of glimpse of avelUr on to any on** grand old somewhat word for tactly like phrase for tnyne sol," )no'ances it morthodox length of me of tha aired three ;he unDro- jastlj be list at ore- stand till le Odessa qnise be- bbnighted upon the i without !us, wbioh ;rsburg to ided here* 3 steamer iebastapol or is this rrency of kopecks, like em- hotela ir makes me 3 pocket, aote npon detective id burglar sll-known lying this Rissian Krasno- fai'orei vaa lfdg' ity giv'^o returned design* » a grea* 0TO IHE JAWS OF DEATH. « CtaxK^ tl"^t ilmased the World TUvty Yean Ago. It vas thirty years ago, on the 25th of October, that the Earl of Cardi^n's light brigade ma-'e the tamons charge at Bala- yava, ner S bastopol. Agentieman who yas on the staff of an Er jrlish Oeoeralj and ^1,0 witnessea the charge, gives this des- eriptiO'i of it "On OiJt. 25, 1854, onreyea torned to the beigbts of balaklava, on the possession of which depended the very ex-stence of the allied forces. On that day the Bnssians gade a desperate attack on oar lines, to be as desperately repuhed. Word was.sent to ^ea('f| carters that the enemy, under cover of a i.ca» y fire from the forts, had left Sebas- topil in iiree and was masking himaelf so as to thr»a'en the tafetyof the heigbts. I was at cuje sent with an order for the cav- alry and horse artillery to move and be ready to asaume the offansive. They had net to wait long. The Turkish line* were •SWEPT AS BY A WHIRLWIND, aiid with cur Mohammedan sllisB the word i was savve qui peut. The heavy cavalry on I the right and the light bri£ade on the left were advanced, with the artilltry in the certre playing a game at long bowls, Meanwhile a Russian battery was ostenta tiou?ly moved forward, whose, well-aetved gnns promised to be emb9rrasaing. "Lor 1 Righn, who did not know thefnll stren^ith of the foe, saw that this obstacle must be removed but whether or not he also fcresaw the necessity of first looking befere the leap was taken must be forever a mystery. The cc mmanders of the cavalry brigades, Lords Lucan and Cardigan brothers-in-law, between whom no love was lost, were waitmg the word to engage. Lord Lucjn being the senior cfficer. To them sped Capt. Nolan, a dashing hussar. Sil- ntiug the General, be aaid he bore an order â€"unwrittenâ€" from Lord Riglan that the battery must be silenced and the guns cap- tured. Lord Lucan, a man ao cautions as to have earned the nickname 'Lord Look- on,' fearing to expose his small force to any ambushed dangers, asked for more definite orders. With a slightly contemptuous turn of his handsome lip, the aide-de-camp pointed in the direction of the battery and said " 'You see your enemy, my lord.' "Even the Earl of Cardigan, impetuous as he was, generally speaking, looked at his ccmirander in dcubt as to the words. But, owing to the unhappy enmity existing be- tween them, .\£ITHER WOULD SPEAK HI.S THOrOHTS, and once more Nclan, impatiently waving his sword, which he had fiercely diawnfrom its scabbard, and ptintingittothe artillery, oried 'Take the guns these are your orders " f-^ "The crisis has arrived. No recourse is left bat to do as he bids. A cold nod of as sent fiom Lord Lucan. A pio'onni bow fum Lira Cardigan 'Light Division, for- ward charge ' breaks trcm his lip?. An schoin^ cheei :s ttie reply fiom 607 throits, with claug of scabbard and rattle of biidle and bit, the! briying of the trumpet, 'ard the ringing cheer ot the 'Heaviea.' the I-iurth and Thirteenth Lights, the EiAth ai.d E eveLth Hu-ssars, the latter Lord C ir- d;gin's own corp?, conspicuous in their chtrry colored trousers, and the Siventeenin La iceis, with ranks closed up and squad- rons dressed as evenly as if at a march past, trot forward down the slight dec!i\ ity. At their head ride the gallant Ntlaft and tne dauntless Cirdigan â€" even at tlia supreme n:c!Ji:nt with a reckless laugh upon his face, as he argues some point of war with his brother hussar, "The unmasked batteries are already beching foith shot and shell. The trot breaks into a gillop, the gallop into A FCRIOUS, HEADLONG CHAEGE. A' ready Nolan has fallen, cut down by grape shot, the secret of the fatal day dying with him. The serried ranks shew frequent gaps as saddle after saddle is emptied. 'vkse up I Closeaip Charge I' ia tUe nn- ceaticg cry, and in a aborter time than it takes to tell the opening ranka of the f03 disclosed to the doomed; but indomitable few, cannon to right of them, canacn to left of them, cannc n in front of thtmâ€" aad now cannon behind them. On through the broken Russian line pressed the noble army of martyrs, their cr.flamm j, their biave leader's flashing sabre, their support. "Wish a wild cheer and a wilder leap, the cherry clad herots fly over the guns as hghtly as they would over a five barred tjate on the hunling field, sabering the gun- nrrs as ihey leap. A beardless bjy, not yet -7, holds fatt to the colors he has sworn to C-: ry to death or victory, and falls with the cry. 'M mother will hear of this ' on his dying lips, still grasping that banner in hia ' Far away, clear in front, with his aide u^ amp and a few choice spirits en his right baud aod en his leit â€" none ahead of him, r g pg lika a lion, fights, as with a forlorn hope, t.He leader and commander of the i-i.ij'ht B i^ade. He bears a chatmed life, it his bia'«^ny arm ia endowed with a pov€r of slaughter that grows mghtier ^^ ry noment from the meat it feeds on. Further and further he dashes on, cleaving his way with his blood-stained sword till he reaches the last of the guns. "Here, when he sees the end ia not yet, hue that rank upon rank cf cavalry and in- fantry, with heavy artillery in the rear, stretches out back to the city's utmoEt bas- tion, he recognizes how useless it will be further to tt nipt the fates and fight UEWSPAPEB FABLES. The Editor of a Country Paner one da« tamed on the Offic. Tjwel.^hith w^ Hanging on ita Accustomed NaiL and be- gan a Tirade of Abuse on its Appearance and fit only to be Plung oat of the Win dow. "While I am compelled to plead guilty to all Charge.,;hnmbl, Responded thflo wel? Yon must Remember that your own Hands have helped to Soil me uid make me what 1 am. A« ExtnordliMiT Frewjk Mnder Caie. J Pel MOBAL: Had the Country Editor wiped bis Hands on his exobanstes the Towel conld have In- dulged m no Back talk. A DOHKSnc Bovr. One mcrninsr the Washington Hand-Pr-ss in a Printing Office suddenly fiewits Frisket and called out in a loud voice ••Hear ye I hear yel But fr me the JSanner could not be issued each week " "Just hear that I" sneered a Case of Bur- geoia over by the Window. "Where would be- the Paper but tor its type " "And they never Printed a Paper yet with- out Ink," added the Roller in a Glue and Molasses voice. "Well, I don's want to Appear E^jotisti- cal, ' observed a Bundle of White paper lymg on the floor, "but if yon knew how hard it was for the Editor to raise thfl Cash to buy me, you'd Imagine I vai of some little Account Aronnd here." ••Gentlemen," added the Imposing Stone in marble voice, "I don't o'aim to own all tne corner lots in Town, but if the Chases, S-'Ooting Stick, Mallet. Qnons and my- self were to go ofi on a Picnic I'd like to see the Banner go to pressâ€" I would V Tne G-irdon Jobber, Box Stove and several of the Galleys wtra getting ready to chip in when the Editcr entered and asked the cause of the Kow. The matter was ex- plained by the Card Cutter in a Calm and Uubiasaed manner, and the Editor" repli- ed "Eicb and every one of yon are valued in your Respective Places, and all combined go to help issue the Leading Newapaper ot thia couniry â€" c'rculat'oa (whtn a circna agent come? a'ong) 6.000 copieaâ€" Wood Received en Subscrp ion, as Heretofore." MOBAL And the Shears lay right there m Plain Sight ^d were not even mentioned. THE FABMEB AND THE EDITOB. A Fsraner who felt in his Heart that this was a cold Wcrld and that no one cared for him or his Mechanically slippen a goose Egg into bis coat tail pocket and Batook him- self to the village and the office of the Gazette, where he Produced the Egg and S*ore by the Hirn Spoon that it was laid by a puliet. The Astonished and Delight- ed Editor "sent out for a Bed-cord to Measnre the Length and Diameter of the Egg presented the Farmer with a Year's Subscription, and took Voluminoua Notes with a Pencil. The next istue of Gazette contained a full and Thrilling Descripticn of the Egg and the Pullet, and wound up by paying tl at; Farmer Johnifn was Honest, Upright, E.it rpriaing and Propreaaive, and that he baa tne Loveliest: Family, t Je best Farm and the F.itte8t Live Stock ^f any ^grlcnltnristin the State. All of which ao Tickled the Firm-r that he curied a Grin until the Weather Wcra the Enamel cfif his front teeth, and he had no Trouble in Marrving of his Daighters, Selling off hia Old Hay, and getting Elected as Snper- vitor. ^^ *• '•^l»*iona made respeoting the eer of P.I, the poisoner offiontreuiT „ »»«" •*Â¥".?*'• °° •charge of having made MatL 7^ "â-  ""S"' • woman uMn^ Marie Boehmer. He i, also charged with having poIroDed his first wife. M Koehn the chief of the investigation department, i; bua y engaged at Moatrenil in Kwing up any clues which may hriag the murder of the servant home to the accused. Two boxes which belonged to the m^si- mg woman were fonnd to contain a napkin, which bore the imprint of a blood- Bfamed knife. A large dianer knife has come to light supposed to be the ment with which Pdl out the flesh bones of hu victim before FREE Bv retHru nuM. Dress Cnttuuc. Toronto, Out '""""*• I' t\iU dtacHptUm. Tailor rvHteat ot PBOF. MOODY, HAND STAMPS METAL Stamp! BTTBBKB da Wanted ^^^L^^' Town. ViUage ZHaoI \r" â- " County la Canada. Laov Srti.2S'""2~ *» " "lw»«» victoria. hSf l^rt^«^aBdjjromMhoo?.- byOra^Ore 5^ 2S?l'S.?'»Jr »«»d. address tor terms anotem- SL;The OwiadUn SabaoripaSaOompSw 8 Kxithenge Bank Buildlnge. MontresUL iostra- off the burning it by some of the chemical processes in which he n s n adept. It is thought that tho ictim's remains were placed in tie closet, as Pel had been observed to mtke frequent viaita there on three successive days m Jaly last. This is somewhat borne out by the fact that when the ceas-pools were dranid to day per cions of human intestines were found. Pel is a clockmaker by trade, and wai mjn-:ed m 1880 to a young woman named B.ffereau, employed in a ehop near the Oaamps Elyssees. Two months after the marnage Pel's wife died in intense agony. She was hastily buried in the Montmartre Csmetery, but her remsin-i are about to be exhumed by order of the Proonreur of the Kepnblic. A year afterward Pel married a Mile, de Murat, who is still alive. Pel deried that he hpd been married ta his first wife, but M. Kuehn confronted bim with his brother- mUw. and he then admitted tfce marriage. M Kuehn baa made a minute examina- tion with a microscrpi of Pel's house at Montreu 1, and in the interstioea of the floor has found living organ saas such sa exiit only in putrefy ioe blood. When Pel ar- rived in M ntreu:l from Nanteire, wnerehe ran away from his second wife aid his cre- ditors in July last, he wai accompanied by the servant Marie Boehm?r, who, it is said, was formerly a lay sister in a convent and afterward a milkaeller in the Rue St Denis She entruated a large share oi her savings to the care of Pel, and about three mentis ago suddenly diaappearej. Pel, in answer to various inqniries, said he had sent her to the hospital. The neigh- bors, however, assert that one night, about the time of Boehmer's disap^ieaiance, a great fire was visible In Pel'a house, and that fie air around was infected by an offensive odor. In an adjacent sewer seme human hair has lately been discovered, and it is in this direction, aa well as in the closet, that Kuehn made hia principal investigatiors to- iiay. Pel will probably be brought face to face with his second wife tn-morrow. It is not long since the mother of the al leged poisoner was killed by an electric bat- tery made by her son. Pel is in a very despondent conditien at M.zas, and hia not partaken of much food during the pait two days. A mottom or associate ba? been placed with him as it was feared that he was about to commit auicidci and possibly the accused clockmaker may make some s'atement to this psrson.â€" [London Tele- graph. MOBAL: If you can't get hold of a Goose Egg, a Pumpkin, Squash or a Ptck of Turnips will .answer jujt as well. ONE AGAISST A THOtTSAND. Ccolly and calmly, as if in Hyde Park, he takes in the situation at a glance, and gives the word to the trumpeter, to sound first tbe 'assembly,' then the 'retreat.' A bullet crashes through the boy's hand as he raises the trumpet to hia month, but, Stoio-like, â- le makes no sign. Clear rings out the sum- mons, A dozen only answer the call. ' ot cue, save Lord Cardigan, but is wound- ed more or less severely, and his clothing ^ooffs where lance or sabrp or bsU had ploughed their way over his nnscathed flesh. Right about the little band leaving the boy trumpeter dead ground behind them. The enemy, paralyzed by the shock of the cbarge, and fancying that the whole British Fmy supports the handful of biaves, pauses " ais murderous wcrk to cheer the 108 sur- jvors who returned slowly and sadly to the place from which they came, havicg, from a 'iitaty standpoint, achieved nothing, yet ^vered with a deathless, fadeless wreath of '^^. 'It waa magnificent,' aaid General 'q-t. -b. t it was not wcr.' " turns, on .the Six Hours Without a Memory. The brain plays odd tricks with us at times, especially when it baa been subject- ed to a sudden ahock and scientific men who think that its various convolntions are the seat) of various faculties o' the mind derive some confirmatfon of their theory from the fact that the power of memory may fail in part without any failure of in- telligence, and m%y fail in part without being altogether impaired. A notable in- stance cf tills last mcnt'oted peculiarity oc- curred about a dozt.n year] ago. A lal in the country was accused of throwing aa- other into a pond, a':d he was put on his 'rial before a bench of magistra';es. His eider brother who bore a high character in the village both for coodnct and fcr men- tal shrewdness, bad seen the previous strug- gle between tho lads, and he was cilled to give evidence. He declared his belief that the fight was perfectly fair througbcut, 2^ni that the immenion in the pond was an acsident. Q je^tioned as to wha^ took place afterward, he could not speak to a sirgle circumstance. "Did the ]:risoner attempt to rescue the deceased?" the Cnairman asked him. He c.uld not say. "The bench unders'asd that you leaped into the water and recovered the body." "They tell me so," hetaid, "but I have no recollec- tion of it." "The constable las told us that you dived twice, brought out the body, and carried it to the parents' house." "I have not the slightest remembrancB. I ot ly know tt at I w£ s at home in bed at 8 o'clock" â€" six hours later â€" "and the last thing I could remember \i a^ seeing po r Smith fall ever the edge." There could be no doubt that the witness wai rp^aking the truth and he could have had no object in doing otherwise. Tne shock which he had re- ceived on seeing the fatil result of his brother's quarrel tad paralyzed his brain; the memory was interrupted by those few hours, though in all ether respects he acted like a man in the full possession of his senses.â€" [Boston Traveller. Age Cannot Witlier. Lord Lindsay states that in the oonrae of his wanderings amid the pyramids of Egypt he stombled on a mummy which proved by its hieroglypliics to be at least 2,000 yeaiB old. In examining it after it was unwrapped he found in ona of its closed hands a taberons or bulbous root. He was interested in the questioi how long veget- able life could last, and took the root from the mummy's hand and planted it in a nin- ny soil, showing the rains and dews of Heaven to descend upon it, and in the course of a few weeka the root bast forth and bloomed into a moat beaatifnl dahlia. The story ia said to be well verified. Effect of Paper and Ink on Eyesight. The oolors of paper and ink, says a writer in the Scientific Monthly, are far m^ r » ro- sponsible for defective eyesight thai cross- lights frcm opposite windows, I'ght shining directly in tbe face, insufficient light, or amalt type. If these were n moved the prin- cipal cause of the mischief would still re- main, the real root of the evil being the uni- versally used blaek ink and white paper. These, says the writer in question, are ruin- ing the eyeught of tbe reading nat ona. He nrgnes that the riys of the sun are reflected by a white body, aid absorbed by a black one, and that we print our newspapers and hoc ks in direct oppositicn to the plainest correct principlej of optical science. A book I r newspaper as now printed being read by us, the eyes do not see the letters, which, being black, are non-reflective the outlines of the impressions of the type reach the re- tina, but they are rot received by the apon- taneous, direc!; action of that organ. The white surface of the p' per is reflected, but the letters are detectetl only by a deacrim- inative effort of the optic nerves. This con- scant labor irritates the nerves, and, when long continued, exhausts their suacep' ibil- i^y. Aa proofs, the writer cites the well- known fact that the human eye cannot long sustain the glare of a white surface without in j iry. The sunlight reflected from fields of snow; unrelieved by the colors of other objec's, cr from the white lands of the de- sert, is, the world over, productive of oph- thalmia. In accordance with this argument; if col- ored pap?r were substituted for white the eyes of all reading people would at once be relieved of a blinding strain â€" a continuoua effort bound to reault in permuent weaken- ing of the eyes. Nature and science, says the writer above quoted, tell us that the color of all printing paper should be green. Green grass covers the ground. green leaves are on the trees and grern is the color most ^r iteful to the eye. Green newspapers would be a novelty, but in time we should grow accustcmed to tint: green school books would please the children: but green grounds would sadly mar the high art engravings for which a num ber of American magazines have become noted. And, if our scientific friend is cor- rect in his concluaioo8r green paper would sadly cripple the trade m eye-glasses and spectacles. Dlspensins with Bridesmaids There has been a great deal of ta^k lately among the fashionables as to whether it is the correct thing for a bride to be attended to the altar by a string of fair bric'esnraids, and also if the tmcompromising b.ack orat of the usher shoidd be longer permitted to obstruct the view. There certainly has been a tendency displayed in recent mar- riages in Philadelphia to dispense with bridesmaids, and several rrafcns have been given by the bridea. A pertinent one is that it is such an expenss to a girl to find a handsome dress, which, as a rule^ can only be worn on one occasion â€" at the wedding. A bridesmaid's frock ia seldom of any use aa a badl dress, and uiybody who baa noticed the picturesque group of maidens who follow after tiie ushers won Id hardly care to see young ladies attired in that fuhidb on the streets.â€" {Plilwielphia PreM* SbSs KBNYuN. TmoLi:y*8TEwlSttT irre oo _7»Kjp«_8t, Wart Tororta. sneeniator a Mmt. AdeWdsSt. BMt,niraDto. II. •^.•fflTTS __„„ „ amUoatioii. '""»»7- «.«.â€" Beat ot rateeaowoa after Hond if, tke fint day of Decembernext ?£« S, «5t!5'^^i.'"i" J^OTomber. W.th da,. iii!nS»" M?«f^. ».?6S2£Vf?^' °^"" ^V. f^.P. Curne Co 100 Qrey Nun Street, Montreal. m~i_ â- Â» Importer! of O^eyTopa, OwadaOement, YentU^agi, Water ^e, Fln» Coren, WhWnir^ Fire Bnoka. Haster of Paria, ^lle Olay Borax, Boman demeat, China cSS -, „^ MannfaotaiofB of ««™» w«»J Besaeer Steel boCa. Cuur Bed Sprlagt GUNS RAWBONE 00. PB4CTICAI Orar MaKEKS fcaie again reaumed bosineas. an want to hear from aU tbeir old ouscovera. We nave he 'inride track" in tbe giiu bualneBS, and wiU turai-h yon Firearm* and nporting Goods at, and in vome casea leas t.ban trade pnoes. Winoheittr Rifles 1873 model for $19 90, other goods just at cheap. We hare remoTed from Yonge 8t and have no conneoMon with tbe old stand. Note change ot addrc«8. Uend 6c for new ilL catalosna. T»l n ^^ITS^^ *,S? • Shaftesbury HallSSrodto. N.B.â€" Ail kmds of Gun repairs done. smokisMge " mortoonTenlent meat for farmera in theto'busy season. These meats are oooked and ready for nae r°ti %r*r??S"i?""W' *^ Dominion. Send for nrio • to W. OLASK. P. O. Box M3 MoT.tr«,L Allan Line Soyal Mau steanulilii. geland. Also from Baltimce VikftSMkx SStgy-gg '^r., to UTerpool fortnightly durinsmunv^M^T S2EL2?^?S «5 the Glasgow vS^uMoSJ'SSS^ betWMn Portland and Qlawow. and Bostoa aadBlaM! i^emately; wid'^d»iii.T5nai«rbrtwSS^ oSSsTSS ^J^B^^^i'iP""" **' »»'»«' intormatiOB apply to A, SohnmaSier tcCo., BaltimoraV? AuL'Tn;. r??"**" *T^" St. John.N.B. Jo'*; H. Bouriieprroronto Allana, Rae » Co Onrteo; H. A. Allan. PortiiSrBMtoSlMSi I the will supply two year old vines of WHITE GRAPE without any conditions whatever at '^Two DoUars 'Each. Agents wanted, apply to D. W. Beadle, St. Cathakinbs. 'Oreicoa, Montreal. Rates of Dominion Lineof Steamships. dnnng the winter months. Sailing dates from ^^^ QniBcoTro LrvBRpooL. ToroBte. ««», ii I •»«.«,„«., Nev. l Oct. I8|*sanua ir*v. s Oct, -gs I Breeklva We^ u steamer and berth. iSeriiSate iS EwSf j! fe^ a,?rt*^i.«" amidships, where butlitUe moU^ felt, and BO eattle or sheep uoarried on them. Vartm Agent or local agents of theOompany. or to ""' BATID TOUANCE « V., General Affents, Montraal. T£[£ model Washer AND BLEACH£B Weighs bat 6 pounds. Can be carried in a imall raliaa. lUustration .shows Blacfaine in boUer. HatislaettoB gi^nusteed or mone v refunded within 30 days ^^•^ KBWAKD FOR IT* SUVCRWB. washing made light and sasy. The clothe* have that pnrewh^neu which no other mode of washing oaa bs«- dnoe. No robbing required, no friction to injured fabric. A 10 year old girl Can do tlie washing aa waU aa an older person. "" To place it in erery household thb pkics has snv ^^^f ' *S ^-^^ "i MO*' 'o^°d satisfactory, iMney '?f""V^?*-m^J'Â¥i S« "Canada PiesbyterSi.^^ TO^Sl'^T^ **•*«'• Washer and Bleacher whiS^Bira W.Dennis offers to the public has many and nloafala «?S£.^*^- » l* » «™e and labor saving maXh^ substantial and enduring, and is Tery chcapTftSm Mai m the household we can testify to its exodleaee peliTered to any express office in the ProTinces of Ob- tanoand Quebec. Charges paid $3.00. Send for oiroolan. ACENTS WlANTED. O. W. DENNIS, TORONTO BARGAIN HOUSE. 213 YONGC STRBBT. 1ORO.VTO. OWT Coleman Patent Harness. biMOVad, works wMlKmliAifletreea. OedL OgM aai •aiMa,me«liMriaronaMaandteaflM. Thk f atnaaa â-  a jMalalty ia onharda, aa ao traai aaabalaliedi ia onterda, aa ae traai aaaba «MUtl«narMU««. PriaafU. MTf forayaia VaUad Btataa •â- Â« J B Dewey Co. FOR Fattening and biinging into condition. Horses, Cows, Calves, Sheep and Pigs. The Yobk8H»b Cattle Fbider is uued and recommended by first- daes breeders. Uilk Cattle prodnce mora milk and butter. Tt fattens in one-fourth the uraal time, and saves food. ' Price 25 cents and 31 per box. 200 Feeds. A dollar box contains HUGH MILLER ft Co. AOBICUTUl,RAI, CBCKJSTS, 167 King St East, Toronto; For Sale by Druggies everywhere. JOHNSrON'S FLUID BEEF It is the onl7 preparatioa o* the kini which contains all tie nutritious, togathar with the stimulating, prooerties of bsaf, anl the ouIt one vrlnohha* the piwer to supple noariah- mentfor brain, and bone, and maaole. The New WTilliams High 'Arm Machine ia now reoogniaed a the â-  Sewing lacMne of tlia Period. R-Ja Ught and Baay t* ru 8Uent and Rapid Temavt, PUlm aMdISlnple te learm It is strong, durable, and well built, hf the verr be^ material that money oaa bu7 or skill produce. »* «•* It was awarded five medals and thiee*fliBt prizes at the Dominion Bzhibitlon last Octo- ber. It is rapidly superseding all the old faaltioned makes everywhere. See it, try It, buy it, ahd make sure that you get It. THE WILLIAMS' MFC GO; 78 Notre Dame St, Montreal, aad St., W Tcrnnto. 1 Ela? GURNETS STOYES WOOD COOEZ 00AI4AND:W00D COOK, FOR SALE BY:8T0VE GRAND OJOi^^ COAL AND WOOD RANGE, COUNTESS BASE BUBNER, wim •â-  wmwvT •vm

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