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Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 27 Nov 1884, p. 7

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 • She had boSS *V ^^r home iTi X "tiring ^* » lie answer!?*"' "•' cam, jjj d something out ;at and pas, oat of bareaa«hel5J2f ?r 'WJag the moment *orgot. r a hand black u realise h?r di,^ o«t her and e room. jv" « floo' her hand helf on whichrte 'e JJraspedit. Un. id with which ,he the negro strode cocked the pistol se to the n|g,o.; ^L load report fd, ihe negro released ^*°*i*ropped to tell but instantly langiDgthe pistol "Kht, she again it the negro, fuUy he negro who was Bding begged for d the Ingfirer, but !8pond. She laid wou'd not go. see that some- ig, staggered to- s he disappeared Cooley discover- half-cocked. The pull, and, as the yard gate Mn ter him. Agafa immediately vai ng towards the sleep from Mrs. of the night and lome she sat be- i in her lap. ;hat she mortally police are scour- it it is most like- 1 the woods. SEALS, tfarketâ€" A HjuU History. sealskin Eacqne proceis by which use. Seen .rhen lal they little re- skins worn npsn and cured ttiey 3carse and full of finable they are 1 side nntil not g hairs are pull 16 cost of the ar- abor expended sold in London, and then ship â- e they are sold The killing sca- the 12th of Jane sually ready for The work of done by natives and St. George interesting one. he natives go to selves along the I the water, and their feet and ble. Thefright- then stampede m like sheep a osptors, attack Being knocked with long ?haip [uickly stripped 3 divided aiD(»g ;he seals down, ill others taking ndians numbers mder the termi itis by the coo- ty tons of coMf 3r, salmon »nd ts. For their 3 $40 000 elto- lore than s^ffl* •ds of life •" â-  gs and utter is* over he seals id a few weeks nmer camping- 1. The malea d young seJs J islands are ut- farseal spends t has never yet he goes away May is all that have suppweo selves to nndw- whfre they ~^ i9on, but s^ e been a"e not a wa' ^• 18 word. "•' '""'• %t°TS eaves St. r^ lere thin ana epassed? " jonwonldhave le. They go taring in theff year the old )n». and art he two roory aul. Heretf itimable va^a« lands in Juiyi r of anin»»« ;he skins eo ^• ofthemM-ket, a new Ug"' noney that it Cbinainan's Stnmge AttaehmMit In Alaska street, on the comer of a narrow is injurioofl |h an inferi^ 11 of unqiu"** itpv below Sixth, there is a dingy laundry, *jjtlie name of **WahKee" painted in flamwg Iftttra on a crazy sign atove the ?*nr This is where Wah Kee Uvea and Irtirks and spendb his lonely life. Xue tousd across tee alley is joat as old, and the roof is just as crazy, ana the lolka ^at liv^e there are just as puor and lonely a ^hat 3 whtre Tot lived. Everybody knew Tot. "ioi'a ilothes wire ola, and Toc'a face vas wan, but Ecm3tiow theaoul ot tlie little one crept into the heart of the lonely China- man, and Wah Kee's eyes beamed as they never beamed before. So he would stand by the door and look acrois ti;e alley at Tot and smile â€" and Tot wccld patter across the little ocean of dirt and watt r, anfl clasping her chubby baid aroutd ^^ '^! Kee's le^s, lock up in hia. face and coo. Toi's fo k- chided the little one â€" for they bated tie sjgltof " the hay then," as they allied Tot's friend. Ona day Tot stayed away and Wah Kee looked in vain for the baby. Another day passed a-.d then Wah Kee's face grew sad and his beart heavy, and he shambled across the narrow alley and begged Tot's folks to tell him where fot wa». They tola him she was sick, that it would be many days belore Tot would be about again. So W^h went back to his dingy shop and rolled up his sleeves amd went to work again, but his bead was heavy and hia heart was across the alley in the little house where Tot layil One day Wah Kee looked over the way to the little house and his heart gave a gieat leap, for there, pressed against; she window was the face of wee Tot â€" white and wan, but smiling. And Wah Kee dropped his iron nd rui across the pavement and stood by the window. Tot's voice was weak and Tot might not have the window np, for it was odd and damp, but Wah Kee stood outside and talk- ed in pantomime and Tot, punching her fiats against the mniky pane, laughed with glee. So every day Tct was propped np in the window and Wah Kee stood in the shop and looked at the little face and sighed. Scmetimes when Wah Kee's countrymen came to see him they laughed, and Hop Long and Lee Yeo and Wong Sug Lung chided him for the strange love he bore the baby, but Wah Kee ouly shook his head and answered " Wah Kee has nlo one else. Tot is Wah Kee's baby." But Tot died, and yesterday they buried her. Tuere were only two carriageti â€" there was one for Tot and t e father and mother of the dead baby â€" and Wah had a carnage, and all alone, in the ailence of the tight- closed cab, he rode aud grieved for the sun- ny face and the rattling nonsense of the child he had worshipped with all the de- votion of his pagan faith. They buried ber at Fernwcod in a little grave in a little plot almost as small, and Wah Kee stood by the grave and chad, and the great tears streamed down his face, and, dropping upon the grave, he kissed the place wnere Tot â€" or ill that was left of her â€"slept in silence. â€" [Pniladelphia News. A NARROW ESCAPE. Tlie Stmcgle Betwetn mMaaituxA a Fan* ther. A Bombay shikaree narrates how he once actuaJly fell into the claws of a panther,and lived to tell the tale. After describing the incidents of the hunt up to the tune when the beast broke cover, he says: "I had to wait until the panther was with- in a few feet of me, and then I put my rifle down to hia head, expecting to roll him over Uke a rabbit (as I had succeeded in domg on other Qcoasiont), and then [lace my se- cond bullet pretty much where I pleased. To my horror, there was no report when the hammer fell. The next moment the panther, with an angry roar, sprang upon me. Hanging on with the claws of one fore- paw driven iiito my right shoulder and the other ronnd me, he tried to get at my head and nsck, bnt I fortunately prevented this by raising my left arm, whica he instantly seized in his huge mouth. I sLa'I never forget bis sharp angry roar, the wicked look of his greenish yellow eves within six inches of mine, the turned back "ears, his fetid breath npcn my cheek, and the feeling of his huge fangs closing to the bone through my arm aho\ e the elbow. "I endeavored, by giving him my knee in the stomach, to make him let go â-  Those who have ever kicked a cat can imagine what little efiect this had. It was more like us- ing one's knee to a fi otball than anything else. The panther, with a roar, gave 1 tremendous wrench to my arm, huiled me some five pices down the side o; the hill prone on my f."»ce, bringing my head in con- taet with a tree. Scunned and in-iensible, a lay Eome seconds on the ground, and the brute, thinking me dead, fortunately did not wony me, but, passing over me, went for the retreating police constable who had brought me into the diffioulty. I remember, when I came to, raising my head from the ground, leaning my head against the tree, and smiling with a certain feeling of grim satisfaction, when my eye caught the re- treating form of the constable and the pur- suing panther down the hill, and I thought tbo policeman's turn had come. "The civil surgeon of the station probed the teeth- wounds in the arm, and found that the ore at the back of the arm rsn right to the bone and was an inch and a half deep. The two wounds en the inner side, in or close to the biceps, were, one an inch and a quarter and the other an inoh deep. The olaw-wcundson the n'ght ahoulder were not serious, and had fortunately just numed the large artery near the collar-bone, injury to which would have resulted in my bleeding todea' h in a veryfew minutes."â€" CThe Times of India. FlantatiOB Fhilosopby. Ba pnsson what ain't t[Ot some selfiahneaa 't nachnl. Faith mighty cften moves der mercbinery dat wouldn't move ef dar was less belief. Pe boss dat hab got faith nebber looks 'ronn at de load an' in de conscqnenoe o' dat lack, Le nebher balks, It am't fur de lub o' money dat «oine piu* ^oss woik. It is "kam dsfcwhen da had ter QO it, da got so used ter de jfooiaticn dat at ' da fin a it de bes* 'panion. Kr poaaoo «n own er disagreeable dog till he ^ati w {Xed ter his waya dat airter er while he '*nit ter I'ke him.â€" [ArkanMB IteT«l«. A'DBT TIME. Wbeatfea a*tk iMake np i «*"S*5**"*^i°*^«*York.aaya: Moet bl ^£^^ »«*v. probaWp* e£ed AoZ 2^»d»*hon to a KhTvidn amst Uke Ihe !Sft -£^!S» owing to hb greater maaaia •taU a flaty globe not yet coolSd down so aa '•»~*»d«™t. But OUT moon being a body of amaU «.« only .boat one-eightirth tL^l?^^"" " wppoeed to hive had tune to cool down to a aolid globe aU the way from it anrfaoe to ita centre. Ita in- t«nal heatn aoppoMd to have been all rad lated away mto tne aorronnding cold space. «ow the hot interior mua of the earUican, of course, contain no water, and Uttls or none of the free gases that conatitnte an at- mosphere. They would be bofled oflF, ex- panded and driven to the surface where ar3 found now the great "bulk of our oceans and our atmosphere. But when the earth shall have parted with all i.s internal heat, hav- lug thrown it into the surrounding cold spaca as the moon has dons, then the c eo id but porous mass within its prest crast, which is now incapable of abt orbing water or air, on accoimt of the present high temperature, will begin to drink np the water and air just as the parched soil after a summer's drought drinks up the rain, aud thegroimd is dry in a few minntes after the shower. But you may well ask, could the solid porous mass within the present crust of the earth thus drink up the whole of the waters of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and cause all the waters of our globe to disappear? Let us examine this more close- While the interior of the earth remains as hot as it is at present it is no more possible for the water and air of our globe to pene- trate to these fiery regions than it is for a drop of water to remain on a hot stone. Bat the earth-is losing its heat day by day and year by year, radiating it out into the surround- ing cold space. I know it has been comput- ed that the euth receives trom the sun an- nually just as much heat as it loses in a year by radiation into the surrounding space. Grant that it may be so for the present and for many thousand years to come. But the trouble is that the sun himself is cooling off and, therefore will not be always able to send us as much heat as he does at present. The time will, therefore, surely come when we shall lose more heat by radiation into space than the sun will be able to return to us. Then it will only be a question of time for the earth gradually to cool down, as the moon has already done, from surface to cen- tre. When that time comes will not the dry but solid and porous core .of our globe drink up the oceans and atmosphere, causing them to disappear, not into large cavernous pock- ets but into the minute poiea of its sub- stance? The proposition appears to be established by strict calcu^auon that the intericr of the earth when cold will be able to absorb mord than four times, possibly more than thirty times, the amount of water now on its sur- face, Now, it seems certain that in the manner first explained the earth will con- tinue to lose both its superficial water and its atmosphere The earth, the other planets, and even the sun himself, are reguded as doomed at some future day to the same fate. Melancholy fate, some will say. Bnt why complain of the general law of j natnr«? Everything in natnrehas its morning of life. Its high meridian of glory and 8tr.ngth, its evening decline and its midnight of black- ness and death. la the lase of a world â€" is that the 'ast term of a series? The World's Telegraplu. Canada has been represented to be a ** slow-going" coantry. We don't believe it. In the matter of great internal im- provements, she stands first among the eoontries of the world, r^;ard being had to population. In railways she has gone ahead with wonderful rapidity, and in csjials she is not wanting, and in tele- graphic lines she is as prominent as she is in railways. A recent report of the Pub- lic Works Department points out that our telegraphic accomo^tion is greater than either that of the United States or any European country. The number of offices in Canada is 2,259, or 1 to 1,914 of population, as based on .the census of 1881. In the Scientific American it is stated that the number of American tele- graph offices in 1882 was 12,917, and the number of telegrams forwarded during the year was 40,581,177. The number of telegraph offices in Great Britain and Ire- land. in 1882 was 5,747, the number of telegrams forwarded being, 32,965,029. Germany has 10,803 offices, the number of tel^rams forwarded being 26,260,124. Bussia had 2,819, the number of tele- grama forwarded being 9,800,201. Bel- gium had 835 offices, the number of tele- grams forwarded being 4,066,843. Spain had 647 offices, the number of telegrams forwarded being 2,830,186. British In- dia had 1,025 offices the number of tele- grams forwarded being 2,032,605. Swit- zerland had 1,160 offices, Italy 2,590,and Austria 2,696. The number of telegrams forwarded in the last three countries men- tioned was 3,040,182, 7,026,387, and 6,626,203, respectively. It will be seen by these figures, having regard to popula- tion, that Canada stands A No. 1, while sbe stands only third or fourth among the nations in the absolute magnitude of her commerce. To say, under these cir- cumstances, that Canada is a "slow-go- ing" countiy, is to prdnounoe upon her an unmitigated libel. â€" [Brantfonl Tele- gram, Oct. 31. GEMS Of'tHOUGHT. No woman is educated who is not equal to the snocessfnl management of a family. The. administration of government, like a guardianship, ought to be directed to the good of those who confer, and not to those who rccsive the trust. I know no snch thing as genius genius ia nothing but labor and diligence. The ignorant man hath no greater foe th vi his own ignorance, for it deatroyeth where it liveth. The key of fate is in our oim hands we often unlock it and then throw the key away. Many people take no care of their money till they have oome nearly to tlie end of it, £d«Me^£%e jUe with their time. The whole of hnman virtue may be re- duced to speaking the truth always, and doing good to otiien. Moon blmdâ€" Si wesarto be the explaaa. tion Tooohsafed by a British Rsar Aamiial to aoooont for the loas of the gunboat Wasp and the imminent danger of the IMdenl This affection is supposed to cause ita vio- timi to grope aa if in the dark in bright moonlight and to mtatake the gleam in a lighthooae for moonahine. One Briti^ writer who obj ota to this not on saya he haa kcown moon-blind men io be eff etnally cured by the paniahmmt of extra duty and it ia really worth while inquiring whether the modem eagemeea to theor zain some unexpected way about disasters on land and aea, does not tend to ahelter under acientifio apeculationa aimp^e carelesaness and groas betrayal of trust. â€" f» fc 1 What 1* cento WiU do. A 10 cent bottle of Poison's Nerviline will cure neuralgia or headache. A 10 cent bottle of Nerviline will cure tooth- ache and faceache. A 10 cent sample bottle of Nerviline is sufficient to cure colds, diarrhoei, spasms, dysentery, c. Nerviline is just the thing to cure all pains, whether internal or external. Buy at your druggist a ten eent sample of Nerviline, "the great pain cure." Safe, prompt, and always effeotuaL Large bot- tles at any drug store, only 25 cents. A Texan steer -eivinga man twenty-four hoars to leave town. How They • it. So called respectable people would hesitate considerable before pilfering your pockets in a crowded thoroughfare. That would be too too. The same dis- crimination is not indicated by the so- called res pectable druggist when that won(?erful com cure, PniNAM's Painless Corn Extbactok, is asked for. He will pilfer your pockets in the most genteel manner by substituting cheap and danger- ous substitutes for the genuine Putnam's Com Extractor. Watch for these gentle- men, and take none otiher than Putnam's Com Extractor. Sold by drun^ts everywhere. N. C Poison Co., King- ston, proprs. -^ "Time is a great physician." That is be- cause it "movea with a leaden heil " Catarrli â€" A Mew T r e a tment. Pechapa the most extrarordinary suooesa that has been achieved in modem science has been attained by the Dixon Treatment of catarrh. Out of 2,000 patients treated during the past six montha, fully ninety per cent, nave been cured of this stubborn malady. This is none the lees startling when it is remembered that not five per cent, of the patients presenting themselves to the r^rular practiuoner are benefitted, while the patent medicines and other advertised cnies never record a onre at aU. Starting with the claim aow generally be- lieved by the most scientiflc men that the disease is due to the presence of living parasites in the tissues, Mr. Dix- on at oooe adapted his cure to their extermination this aocompIiBhed the catarrh is practically onred, and the permanency is un- questioned, as cures effected by him four years ago are cures stilL No one else has ever at- tempted to onre catarrh in this manner, and no other treatment has ever cured catarrh. The application ot the remedy is simple and;oan be done at home, and the present season of the year is the most favorable for a speedy and permanent cure, the majoribr of oases being cured at one treatment. Sufferers should cor- respond with Messra A. H. DIXOk SON, 905 King-etreet West, Toronto, Canada, and enclose stamp for their treatise on oaXaxrh.â€"MontretU Still life â€" a tramp at work. â-  impovtanti When yon visit or leave New York City, save Baggage Bzpressage and Carriage Hire, and stop at the Oband Union Hotel opposite Grand Central Depot. 800 elcffant rooms fitted np at a cost of one million dollara, ilandnovrardsperdoy. Bnropean plan. Ele- vator. Bestanranc supplied with the best. Horse carB, atages and (devated railroada to all depots. Families can live better for lees money at tlie Grand Union Hotel thorn at anv other flrat-olaas hotel In the oitv. GOODS. SIOKEDSMIGES. Tbe mgrtoooTiilBBt meat for himwi In tbeir btm MMsn. XboM BMts MB oooked and nadj for «• f?^.^ffiggffyg^°SS£5i '°' â- * Dominion Line of Steamships. B nn ntng to con n ecMon with the Oiaod T^Mik Baflwmi ofOHuda. aailiDgtnMBQDrtMoerarpSatardwrdariai toe mmmer months, and from PantaodeverrTnaniai dorins the winter moatha. H»iH"t dftlcs ttom VOMBmC XO UVXBfOOI.. Terente. oea ll i 'Vanconver. Hav l "•regea «et. 18 1 *Sanila Nor 8 â- â€¢â- treal, •«(. M Breoklya. Nev. u B«tM of pMMge: Oabin. Quebee toldTeipooI SSa. MO «65. 980. Eetun. too. «! «U7. «IM, Imm^Ss to Btewner and berth. Iirtenneii»te $35, Bteenge at lowest rates. The saloons and staterooms in steamer* marke' thus: are amidships, where bat little motion felt, and no oattle or sheep is oanied on them. For tw ther partioolars apply to any OriMid nnnk Ballwai ^gent or loeal sgents of the Oompaoy, or to IIAVU* T»KftAlliV£ Wt CO.* General Arents, Utmtrea' Printing Press For Sale. Hoe lnna,QyiiBd8r, ia Ibst^Uss "" ul«oteap,siaeofb.d 87i z 331. Book-niminer as good as new. lltB^rMNetVaNBta. GUNS nSX GOLD AZTD SILTEB JEWJSIiLEBT. IiADIES- AND GENTS' PIAMOND EIKOa GOLD AND SLLVEB WATCHES, FBENCH MA-R-RT.ft AND GILT OLOOKB. BBONZE STATUETTES AND OBNAMENTS. STESLXNG SILTEB TABLE.WABE. SILyEBPLATED. HOLLOW VLAT WASB, TIZ: TEA AND COFFEE SETS, SIX PIECES. FBXTIT STANDS. CAKE BASKETS. KFEBGNES. SWING PITCHEBSb YASES, JEWEL CASES, TOILBT BEia. OASTEBS, BTTTTEB DISHES, AU. xmi BIATUES- asns or DKSSEBT KNIVES Axn FOBKS.IN OASB. nSH OABTEBS FISH EAIEBS, IN OASB, also DBXSsicra oases, (ladie? awo oxsts.) OPERA AND nSLD OUASSKS. FLAIH AND OABYED UEEBSCHAtni PIFBL PHOTO ALBUMS AKD ntAJOS MUBIOAL B0XB3. TWO TO TBIT AUta TI0LIN8. AOOOBDSONB, OONOEBTINA WBEHNO DBBKB, WOBK BOXES. aAJa8,T07B* DOLLS OP ALL KDfDB. SMITH A FUD6ER. (WHOUMAU On.T.) TORONTO." (naiai] FOB Fattening and tringing into condition, KrMa Cows, Oalves,, Sheep and Piga. The Yorkshibb Oattls FsaDBR is used and recommended by Ant- class breeders. Uilk Cattle produce mnie milk and butter. It fattens in one-fourth the usual time, and saTe* Food. S Price 25 cents and 91 per box. A dollar box coBkaia Feed*. HUGH Mn.LKB and Oe., AeaiotrLTUBAi. Okuiibcb, lerKiag St Bait, Toronto. For Bale by Drogalsts eremrtiere. THE MODEL Washer AND BLEAGHEB Weigh* but 6 pounds. Can be earrledin a small valise, ninstration shows llaohine in boiler. Satisfaotion guaranteed or money refunded within 30 days. |lOO«.M BJBWAaO FOB ITS SUFXBIOR. Washing made lixht and easy. The clothes have that pure whiteness whidi no other mode of ^mshing can pro- duce. No rubbing required, no friction to injure the fabric. A 10 year old girl can do the washing aa well as an older person. To place it in every household thk fkiok has Bsnr BXDTTCXD to $8.50, and if not found satisfactory, money refunded. See what the "Canada Presbyterian," sap about itâ€" The Model Washer and Bleacher which Hr. O. W. Dennis offers to the public has many and valugble advantages. It is a time, and labor saving machine, substantial and enduring, and is very cheap. From trie in the household we can testify to its exoellenco Delivered to any express office in the Frovinoes of On tario and Quebec. Charges paid $3.00 Send for dronlart AGENTS WANTED. 0. W. DENNIS, TORONTO BARGAIN HOUSB, 813 TONOK STSKVT. TOItOWTO. ONT BAWaONEOO Praetieal Out Makenu have aiialn resnmad ba^iaess. and want to hear troa all their old oastomeis. We have the "inside traek la the gun Inutnao, and will fnmiUi yoa Firearms aaS Sporting Goods at, and in nome cases less Uiao, trade prices. Wi|iehtster B-flai 1873 madel for $1999, othot goods just as cheap. We havdrt moved frMaYoogeSk. and have do connection with the old stand. Hols change of addrws -Seed 6a tar new i 1. oaisloinie. BAWBONE a CO Shaftesbury HaU, ToHMtOL W. B.â€" AH ktnoa of Gai repjdra done. Allan Line Royal Man staamsnipi. Sailing during winter trom PwUand every Ibiindav and H ali faT every Saturday to IiiTeipooI,andtosiiiaaNr bom Quebec every Saturday to Liveiiiool, calling at Lmp donderry to land mails and passengers for Scotland aa4 Ireland. Also from Baltimore viaHalif ax and SVJoha^ N. F., to Liverpool fortnightly during summer montka. nie steamers ot the Glasgow lines sail during wialar between Portland and Glasgow, and Boston andGla^ov altonately; and during summer between Quebee mA Glasgow and Boston taid Glasgow erery week. For freight, paasaee, or other informattim apply to A. achamaoher Ca, Baltimore; 3. Cunard Cki, Halifax Shea Co, St Johni N.F.;Wm. Thomson Co., St John,N. B. Allan Co, Chioi«p Leve Alden, New York H. Bcnrller, Toronto Allans, Rae Oo Qnebeo H. A. Allan, Portland, Beaton, lloa treaL CHRISTMAS CARDS BY MAIL BO"K^S and GM£t,]L.S (both large and small) Coa make aieaey for Cltrlsimaa by aelUacv onr Cords to Prienas and ifel^beta cTeiy where. Our Gard Packages S^ iS^flS as'sortmeai ia larger anti the quality of the cards liner than any previoaa ear. Arery handsome profit can be realised, as Uie prioea are loss than whelcsale. Our atock is aeleofe- ed from the best aaakers off tbe werlil, and ia ver} choice. No two alike. Remember post- age prepaid. Na 1 -For 25 oenta we will mall you 25 bean- tjf ol amall size oorda, worth from S to 5 oenta each. No 2-For 50 eenta we will mall you aboT with the addition of four handaome fringed cardB.4 No. 3â€" For fifty cents we will maU yoa S beautiful medium sized cards worth from fi to lOoentseach. No. 4â€" For |L00 we will mail you same oa Na 3, with six elegant medium size fringe cards. No. 5â€" For yi.00 we will mail yoa 25 large size cards worth from 10 to 15 cents each. No. 6â€" For $ii.00 we will mail you sameaa No. 5, and six very handsome large size fringed cards. No. 7 -For $3.00 we will mail yon 100 same kind of cards as No. 5. Prlaged Cards. Hand-Palnted Cards, Ivory and Ivorlne Cards and other noveltiea at 10, 15, 25, 50. 75 cents, and f 1.00 each, which W:ll ba selected with care for different tastes and ages. Birthday Gard FaokaKes, exceptioK for Nos. 1 and 2. put up an 1 mailed same as the Ohrist- mas Cards; or if so desired they ean be assert- ed Christmas and Birthday. Cards mailed same day as order received. Cash must aiwaya accompany o.der. Address MAT i'HBW BROS. CO., 83 foige St. Toronto. JOHNSTON'S FLUID BEEF It ia the only preparation of the kind wUeh contains all the nutritious, together with the stimulating, properties of beef, aad the only one irhioh na* tne power to supply nourlab- ment for brain, and none, and mu9dc. M ERIDEN "B RITANNIA QO, :) MANUFACTUMSES OF (:â€" â€" New York, MerideD (Ct.), (Meatpt, San rnmolsco, London, (Eng.)* BRANCH FACTOBYâ€" Cor. Cannon and Wellington Streets, Hamilton, Ont. TRABB Uany porchasera haring through a similarity of names purchased other wares under the impression that they were of ear manufacture, we are compell- ed to aek special attention to the above TBADB MARKS The fact that our name and Trade Marks are being A close- ly imitated should be a snfBcient guarao* tee tothepobliothat onr wares are the BEST IN THE WOBLD. 1847 Bt^rs Bres. Al. !,_= ;9ABK. URNEY'S STOVES. WOOD COOK COAL AND WOOD COOK GRAND DUCHESS COAL AND WOOD RANGE COUNTESS BASE BURNER WIT OK WITHOinr OT0. FORISALE BY STOVE DEALERS HERE. The New Willams High Arm Machine ia now reoognind a^ the Seving Macbme of tiie Feilol n la Ui^t aad KoaF te awa|i â- flCBtHi«BaM Ml It ia atroBfc dnraUe, and weU boltt. ot the beat BBof • â- ^' paod n ofc vary bert materlalSot maaar oaa tony or It was awarded flv« raedali aiad ttneaWnl priaea at tba nominlon KrMWtloo lail Ooto- ber. B to rasUly â€" j aiei Mi Bg aU flie old fta Jilflned mntmrn t tei m U n, gae It try tti bnrtti â- admrikaiirethat yon nt tb ^..t-LI^V^J' â- â- 

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