Ontario Community Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 11 Dec 1884, p. 7

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 be gU^ *»t «^ rencix^ Uaify. iii month, 1" poor iquality. °- reject ne what â- ^ them. »w^ other ' growth quashes, "n good f manvire nothing in cr ease ile. The :quainted vicinity, sir ref une, 'alue I working f procure ie appli- lep, etc. bunching r raising ve. to pre- the snow tn, as the ess when 2en treea )y snow, n. Shake w, before ovementa consider- n of the wn to a loing the ournal of b farinace- othera m [accaroni, I, in his iegree the ong aeries i gas con- whiskey, 1 a process into lirst- s making Is. says that »wer have ecause the form, and I times as feet per friction itances of fficient of 016, in- Terra del ermarry Southern le English e on the Mission d to the )r. Hahn. jle appear 13 of the Diversity 1. Dublin, m agneto- strument Dixon. from a y to one lie other iiasses of ated. A ;m. oucis has means of ,ce3 abou« h instan- ic-leased m easurea ci^meras IS photo- ro HI these gives the •fth great cet chro- on at Jays. A ible tcm- several IFct five lerein will lich will it a time ide, ao \m 35. to balloon _et. The Igas con- le night Wt day, [gas ex- kvatioES, fcripples tstion of lyou can Ive forty- travel » [of speed strong hour. lyhOB- know said* "Why raatbe SOID0 A LOST AKi:, .jT- I or A number of heavy white milUltoneB ^re pti^ °P °° ^^^ ^^ ^^ doolu :alioog jhe river. They were ecHMU^ned to some interior town forty or fifqr miles from^ the city, and were of the style, ijoake, 'and finish so long in use. An old nun, witii a slouch h*t pulled down so far over his {^ce that his small, fast blinkiog eyes. from view, stood a little way back on the vharf and talked to a yonng man he had halted and asked for a match. "Mill- jtones have pretty nearly gone out of: jate," aaid he, with a half mournful air, 'aiid with them h^ve gone theoocupatlon 1 have followed for thirty years. See hero, ' ai^'d the old man crowded his hat over on to rhe back part of his head and lifted his face for the first time into plain: sight. It was pitted all over with num- berless ugly dimples,^ depressions, and eats, and iooked as if he might have some day have had the smaLl pox, "Do yon know how that was done V he asked. The young man did not know. "By pickinsi mUl-stonfS," was the qalck- ly volunteered inf ormadon. No one who has ever followed the business of giving these stones that keen cuv texture that enables them to crush and grind grain, can escape these scars. Why, my face is literally filled with the little particles of steel and stone, and my eyes have seasons of paining me terribly. But the profes- sion has about run its race. In ten years the dictionary makers will put the stereo- typed word 'obsolete ' after the noun •millstone. Modern inventions have re- legated the time-honored millstones to oblivioQ. New processes have been dla covered for extracting the wheat from flour, beside which the millstone has no show." The young man began to grow inter- ested. He drew. his companion into the doorway of a little switch shanty, secur- ed permission for the two sit down a mo- ment beiore the fire, and asked him to continue. 'Nowadays," said the old man, "wheat is crushed beneath rollers and the flour produced is much superior to the old make. Then, too, the bran that wai once thought to be almost worthless is now sifted by a new process and a quality o,f flour is separated that is worth forty or fifty c-juts moi'e per sack than the common variety. You have heard that the best part of a putato lay just beneath the skin. Recent scientific experiments have shown that it is true of all vegetables; especialy of the wheat. This suggested the construction of a sieve that would separate the little particles of the kernel that cling to the shuck when it has been broken up and ground to pieces. It has been successful, and the flour secured in this way, though small in quantify, is of superb quality. This latter process was the only means possible by thenew meth- od of grinding wheat that has bean gen- erally adopted by all the lar^e mills in the country. But in the 'meantime my occupation has been gradu^ly under- mined. Once in a while I have a caB to go somewhere into the country and dress a SGone, but it is very seldom." ;A "Most of the millstones in use in this country are of French burr, a ftilioious rock, containing many small' rough cavi- ties, and reqiiring less preparation than a perfectly plain stone. It is quarried in the geological district known as the 'Paris basin.' A quarry has been worked for many years in the valley of the Sa- vannah river, about one hundred miles above the city ri Savannah, and thu qual- ity of stones secured are said to bs almost equal t those produced in France. Tue lower stone has generally a smooth grind- ing surface. The moving stone is hol- lo weid toward the centre to allow the ma- terial ground room to flow freely between the grinding surfaces. The faces of both stones have to be cut with straight grooves in direction inclined radii. The edges of the grooves are thui given a cat- ting action somewhat resembling that of scissor blades, and a tendency to force the grain outward towards the circumfer- ence is secured, thus accelerating the feeding and avoiding choking. To do this work^per fectly requires an enormous amount of practice, an and apprentice must serve four or five years on cheap stones before he is allowed to touch the most valuable ones. Machines were once invented to do the cutting, but they were not a success. It was a hard busi- ness to learn, and its day was very profit- able. Modem innovations, however, have no sympsthy for workingmen, and in ten years it is doubtful if there will be a millstone in use in this country. â€" [Cleveland Leader. »ve 00- Studying tlie Past. We all have an innate craving to grasp some part or parcel of the tissue of the pist, whether we express it by collecting Damascus sword blades. Aleppo prayer rugs, old manuscripts or otherbric-a-brac, or whether we "notch off a fragment of the Acropolis or carve one's name among the ruins of the Forum." We are always trying to revive and rehabilitate the dead past, "to know something more of the vanity and pettiness, the fear and longing of those weary men and women, the mem- orial of whose lives has been trampled out." Electricity as a Brake. A new tlectric brake, recently invented ^y an American, named Walker, and which is already in use in America, was lately tried on a tramway between Turin *iid Piosassio, with remarkable results. " is reported tha^ by means of this brake ^wo cars, running at a speed of about twenty -iwo miles per hour, were stopped '^.'^he short sp t.ce of six seconds, and Within a distance of twenty yards. This, •» reliuble, is a great achievement certain- 7 aud will doubtless lead to further and "lore extensive experiments, and possibly « Its general adoption. The brake is at present bemg exhibited in the Turin Ex- Wbition. Pl^yins €ard8 of the PastT PlajWBg c%td», of .OTutHe, form the sta- HealthExhibition ]bntw^ver drwuned that such » collection of eaids of aU aeea "4 counteie.- f rom Bngbmd to the ^aat-could be brought together? The walla are hteraUy covered with them, and the tablesbear man yrare and enrious spe- cimens. There are French cuicatore cards printed from copper plate and col- ored by Tiand, bearing the date 1818; Ger- |Pfl^**'fJ**'^««l 'f^ witb the duM of the consteUations, colored by harid'.^f the Wmoteenth-eentuiy; German andFx^ch heraldic playing cuds^ wiith the ooats of ^i^?°^ blazonipg of the Prinoqs^And aoMWof Eoxope. beavlog' ti^e dati^ ]i^20 Th^re is an EngUah p^wk of 62 picture /Wios, each cud iIloat«fttive of the virtues and yices of mankind; the d^rte of thi in- tereating pack is 1720. There tee French playing cards jwlt^ dance miuic4lud Eng- lish- snd Freqabeudtf for teaohiajl geog- raphy to the children of the liUiter part of thd seventeenth century. One j wc lt of cards, not satisfied with Soglan^ and Wales, profess to teaah tfaa geoo»idiy to Uie world. This appears to hiEre a com- mon mode of instmodon in thq easy-go- ing times of Charles IL Theieelsa very amusing pack of caricature' cards of the year 1745. One set of different kind com- memorates the murder of Sir Edmund- beirry Godfrey and the Popish plot of 1679. As Titus Oates figures here as a hero, it is only fair to assume that the cards were designed previous to the exposure of Oates's villainy. A pack of cards bear- ing the date 1720 caricatures the persons and incidents of the South Sea Bubble. Another pack, dated 1710, gives a series of portraits of eminent Greeks and Rom- ans. Sporting is represented on cards de- signed.as far back as 1705â€" a very beauti- ful example of engraving of that period. A book describing fortune by playing cards contains some curious woodcuts, many of them evidently copied from the very rare pack of cards known as the Cartes de Baldini. Then we have the learned Dr. T. Mumer's cards for teach- ing logic and jurisprudence with which it is said he was so successful as a teacher that he narrowly escaped being burned as a sorcerer. The issue of 1509 and the French reprint may be seen together in Old London, and near to them is a very curious and rare fortune telling book of cards made in Venice in 1607. Among the greatest rarities are two cards from the pack known as the "Chotto" cards of 1480 or thereabouts, and f onr cards from a p4ck of circular playing cards made at Colosne about 1470, China, Japan, and Hindustan are also represented by various examples of the curii^us playing cards of those countries, and visitors to the inter- esting exhibit should take note of the pack of Tarrochtni cards of Bologna. The Makers of Playing Cards Company show packs of their cards issued for the years 1872 and 1873, bearing, the arms of the company. TheMttelli,wnicharefiaeexam- ples of design of the period. It is amus- ing to see here (when we remember the authorship which is sometimes assigned to playing cards) that a thick illuscrated quarto shoirn m one of the cases is a treatise devoted to teaching Bible history by means of playing cards. Worthy of notice is the pack of cards by Christopher Blanchard, "maker in ordinary to his Majesty George III.," of 1783, and those who care to see what has been done to improve playing cards in a hundred years may compare this pack with that of the Playing Card Makers of 1883, which is shown closely by it. A proclamation of Charles L, protecting the playing card makers of London against foreign inva- sion, is shown on the^wlndow shutter of the Old R^se Inn. ' This collection is both interesting and valuable as showing thkt for 400 years at least playing cards have formed an important part of the diversions of the civUized world, and it is worthy of remark, also, that they have been used in no insignificant way as an aid to scholastic education. The collect- ion and arrangement is due to the energy of Mr. George Clulow, a member of the Court of Assistants of the company, whose intimate knowledge on the subject of playing cards, antiquarian, historical, and practical, has been used to produce an ex- hibit of a most novel and attractive char- acter. About Paris Gamblins-Honses. A Parisian journal has been mak ing some inquiries regarding the number of gaming-houses and gambling hells in the "capital of civilization " and the amount of money which changes hands in them. If the information be trustworthy, it is indeed startling. There are twenty-four of these tripots in Paris, and between six and seven millions sterling are computed to have been lost there during the last five yean. The minimum profits of the banks in the clubs are put down at £240 daily, and in the less select gambling- house* lit £40L Taking tl^ av«rage at £80^ pe^ day, the total for tiie five years comes out at the respectable figure of three and a-half millions sterling. Nearly another two and a half millions are set down as the five years' "pickings" of the croupiers and ftreteun. Some of these men make enormous incomes, and it is certalnlywell within the mark to put down their receipts at an average of £4,- 000 per annum. Then there is another half-million for tne salaries of adminis- trators and their staffs. Truly, it would appear that, if the French Glovemment is to suppress Mont Carlo, it must at the same time suppress the private and semi- raivate gsftiUing-heUs which stand at the very doors of the Ely see. He Knew it by Sigbt. ' "Johnny do you know the Tenth Com- mandment V "Yes'm." "Say it," "Can't." "But you said you knew it, Johnny." "Yes'm I know it when I see it." nrfg l HI* «AaA»Al â€" Vhft A4vwMag«a sr tM» •annF Tetw^'a ixMrteace. faroiUo MaO, ' The Earl of Dnfiecina om late Govern nor-General, is evidentfy a nuoj'of des- tiny. His appointment to .the Vice royalty of India is a deaerr^ honor, and he will have the best wishes of every loyal Canadian. Bat he has ho sinecure. Englidi rale In India is aT difficult thing to maintainâ€" •• the late Postmaster- General Fawcett often pointedly told Parliament â€" ^for it la one oivilization at- tempting to rule another on its own do- main. Moreover, the ruling class will always be in s minority because the cli- mate Is so exacting titmt Englishmen lean- not colonize the country in any consider- able numbers, ildcdtii cannot long abide there without a chuige of climate, and children bom there of Caucasian p^jnts, invariably die if they are kept in the country over six yean. India has many naturftl advantages over other English dependencies, but Canada has a more healthful climate, and she is not vexed, with the problems of the government of alieiu. The heat of the lowlands of India is something dreadful, the average being over 80 degrees In the dry season the glass often registera 120 °y Most of the wealthy class can flee to.ihe mountains in summer, but the army officers and men have to endure it. As a conse- quence the mortality is very great; Not long ago it was our privilege to convene at some length with Mr. T. B. Deacon, of Goderich, who has served in Her Majesty's Indian army over 17 years. To our inquiry on how the cli- mate affects the health of foreigners, he said â€" 'Well, one does not notice the change at first unless the dry and hot season is on. Indeed I endured the damp hot of winter and the dry heat of summer very well for many yean. No.t till 1877, did I begin to feel knockied up entirely. Then 1 Ics: flesh rapidly, my appetite was chat capricious that I cotild find nothing agreeable, my boifMs were stupidly torpid, my spirit was gone directly I wanted any vim. I got that yellow that I looked very like a lemon, and my legs swelled in size to an elephant's. And sure enough, I was weak! No, I had no pain at all. I was simply quietly wasting away, my system be'iug completely saturated with malaria None of the army physicians could help me, and I finally went home for trea'^ment, but the London medical ^men gave it up when they saw me and learned that I had been soldering in India. -Quite given out I came to Canada, but fiat no help here, either. I had about maSe up my mind that it was all up with m.e b^t-by a very fortunate turn of circumstaijijpes I began to use the famous Warper's- Safe Cure, and when I had taken nine "tj^ottles I gou to be a strong and healti^ .man, having run from 92 to 142 lbs., the most I ever weighed. I have not had to take a drop of medicine in over a twelve-month. No, I shall not go back to Il^i aad I don't advise any of my friends'-either here or at home to go there. The^auQaslan has no business there whateyez^' â-  ..Some of us may at tiiheis feel like find- ing a little fault with our cold Dominion, but take it all in all we have a climate much preferable to that' of "India's oonl strands," and we still stick to our own country. Cold feet and huids are cartaio indloationa of imper- fect eircuiation of the bload.- Dip Carson's Stomach tsit- lera Dtomjtes th3 circulation kdepa tne bo weis .regular and induces good healtB. Large bottles at SO ceute. "Halloo!" shouted .ou'e boy to another,^ whom he saw running wildly dowu the street. " Halloo are you training for a race " " No," called back the fly- ing boy. "I'm racing for a train." What 10 Centi will do A 10 cent bottle of Poison's Nerviline will cure neuralgia or headache. A ten cent bottle of Nerviline will cure tooth- ache or faceache. A 10 cent sample bot- tle of Nerviline, is sufficient to cture colds, diarrhoea, spasms, dys^tery, c. Nervi- line is just the thing./ 'to cure all pains, whether internal or external. Buy at Jrour druggist a 10 cei^ sample of Nervi- ine, "the great pain odfe." Safe, prompt, and always effectuaL JLarge bottles at any drug store, only 2v^centa. A little town up i^-New. York has a skating rink that they jtfdl the 'Niagara." It is supposed that they call It that be- cause the people gd- there to see the "faUs," :% Catan-bâ€" A ino^ Tre atm ent. Perhaps the most estraovdiaay sacoes that has been achieved la modem science has been attained by the Dixon DMatment of catarrh Ont of 2,000 patients tBMrteddtiriir the past six moatha, nilly nUtakg^pet ceDthave been onred of this stabbom mitlady. Tbia is none the less startling when* is retnembered that not five per cent, at the patients presenting thonselves to the rcKolar fxaotition benefitted, while the patent medl4pin( other advertised ooies never rcioozd. alL BtarttBg with (ha ^flaim «ow believed by the meat that the disease is due to „^ of living panisiteB in the ttssiies. Mr.Wiz* on at once adapted liip o^ to tb'eir extermination; this aooompllshed tfte catarrh Is practically cored, and the aeisianaaoy is un- qnestloned, as cures effsoiSa by him. Ibar years ago are cores stilL No one elBB has'ever at- tempted to core catarrh IntUs ioanner, and no other treatment has everiOared tetarrli. The application of the remedy as simple, and can be done at home, and the present season of the year is the most favorable tor a speedy and permanent core the maiority of oases being cored at one treatment. SolfbrerB shoold oor-' respond with Messrs. A. ^. tllXON bUN. 306 King-street West, loronts, Canada, and enclose stamp for their treatise on caXaah.â€" Montreal Star. "Love begets love," sings the old song, but how are you going to reconcile that with the homeopathic claim' that iikO;, cures like? ' Impflprtanb, When yon visit or leave New York Citjv save Baggage Bxpreesage ukd Oatriage Hi^ and stop at the QftAito Uvion Hotsl oig|osUe Qrand Central UOpoU- 600 elegant Isooms fitted IV at. a coat of one. million, ^sUars, fl and upwards per da#;' BoropeaaiiUii; Ele- vator. Bestanrant sopplied with thft-best Horse eats, stagasiad etovaied/ nJbMd» to all depots. Families can live 4MMw for less nuSey at the Grand Unioe Hotel than at aov other flrst-daaa hotel in the oltr* "^LTAio Bblt Coi.^of ^ar^all, TBO-VoLtAld "Ku and ntkar TCr. Ktrretn PUANOBS ontaAfeior tHuO^ day*; Iven jTfMVor olU afflicted with nerroos debtti- ty. loM ol vitUH^, aifd aU kindred tronblas. Also for rhenmainsm, nenralgii^ paralysis, uid many other diseases. Oomplete restor iition fo health, vigor and msMhoorl gnaraa- teed. No risk is inoorred cs thirty days' trial iii.anowod. Write them at once for illustrated pamphlet free. A. nMstmdentanding] ^is master â€" "Did you take those boots of mine*to be soled, Laoy? ' Irish valetâ€" "I did, sor: and see the thrifle the blag'yard give me for 'm! â€" said they was purty ni«h wore thrrujjh!" r â€"s H«w Tfm do It â-  So-called respectable people would hesitate considerable before pilfering your pockets in a crowded t^yxoughfare. That would be too too. The saine' dis- crimination is not indicated by the so- called respectable druggist when that wonderful com cure, i'OTNASf's Painless CoBN Extractor, is askecf t6i. 'Ho n^fll pilfer your pockets in the most gentee manner by substituting cheap and danger* ous substitutes for the geniune Putnam's Com Extractor. Watch for th^se.feontle- men, and take none other than Putnam's Corn Extractor. Sold by dru^rgists everywhere. N. C. Poison Co., King- ston, proprs. A. P. 206, P~EWXONfrCO t^ llaaaiaetann er Star Mimtt tieHim^T BeMns I S^VktsMMBk. Bast, Tweate. R. U. AWARE THAT LECTURERS wanted. See The Sun. Copy free. SUN, Box 2,083, Kalamazoo, Mioh.' VAIUABLE Samples worth $5 for only 25c. Ad drets J. E. Parsons, Gluucoster, Mass. Mention thi5 pape r. (myC TO S301 AND EXPENSES A MONTH GuAB- «P f W anteeB 1 1 Agents everywhere. Circulars FKES. W. A HOATa C J., Toronto, Canada. rfirr" Byretum mail. Full description. rKrr Maody'8 1«'»)W Tailor B).i8tem of I IIUL. Dress Cutting. PROF. MOjDY, Toronto, Ont. Oompound. Oxyg-en Cures Bronchitis, Neuralgia, Consumption, Rheumat- ism, Asthma, Catarrh, Uyspepsia, Scr- fula, Cnronic Sore Throft, Nervou- ExhausMon, Par»lyBie, etc., etc. Home aud office tnatuitriit Trial fue. All c-rvous di^eaiies fiiirl tpee dy relief ar d permanent cuie. Tcose who are suSennv fom auy of Uie above namod diseases should give ' 'ompouud Oxygen a Tri»l. 73 King bt West, Tororto. scription, S'sis, etc. Bronze Medals the last four years at Toronto Shtbitlon. Agents wanted KENYCjN, TINGLEY, STEWART MFG. CO., 72 King St., West, Toronto. A. R; WILLIAMH, DEALKR IN KUBti:at every de ENGINES. IRON TOOLS, SAW-MILLS, BOILERS, WOOD TOOLS, .saiNGLE-MILLS. BELTING, BAND SAWS, LATH Mil LS. Send for new circular, ODentioning this paper. 50HD Mwn ypMs, tmrnn. C AU T_l ON Each Plug of tlic MYRTLE NAVY IS MARKED T. In Bronze Letters. NONE OTHER GENUINE. HOLIDAY GIFT w5 Pastor, Parent, Teacher, Child, friend. A WELCOME GIFT. fln^lJlfea St small extra cost with DENISON'S PATE My BEFERENg IKDEX* The latest edition has'-SOOO more Words itf tp Tocabulary than are found In any other Am. Dict'y «nd nearly 3 times the number of Engravings. An invaluable companion in every library and at every fireside.â€" Tbron^o Globe. Best Dictionary of the language.â€" iondon Timei. .6. C. HERRUH A CO., Pub'rs, Springfield. Mm*. Zior!llara'9 Olimaac Plfi^, toftriiiaar«iMi»(a0; thatLortllaM^ „ â€" 1„ Koae licaf fine cut that LarUUid'i Navy CIlBpinsa, and that LortUard'a 8nHflh.ara the best and cheapeet. onalltr eonstdarad ^^^ ^^ Sears to perfect. oM of lu adults. Cutea ererrdhildi Holds the wofrt Hernia, duriDghardem work or mooaf refunded. 25 yean praoUoal enari ienoe. CHrcalan free. Aildrasi, Dm BGASIltrKaiAL TBV3906., a Adelaide Ht. Bist, ToMUCt, Ual SM0ra81l]8A(]lE8. The most eanvanteiit meat for tarmen In their bom â- eason. Th«M Bieau are cooked and ready fa* mm Sold by grooers throach the Dominton Bend for BrtM toW. OLABK P.O. Box 343 Montreal- B RITISH AMER.IGAN BrrSINESS OOLLEGB, !ABOADE, TONQB 8T,TOB NTO. Finest rooms in America. Practt cal in every department. Teachers pubing and ener- getic, and know what tbey teach. Kndorsed by itta leading ' bittincss men of Ontario, its graduates ara fllling positions of trust in every city, town and villaga Canada. H«nd tor new circular. C. O'JDE A, Secretary W. F. P. Currie 6l Go. 100 Qrey Nun 8t,i Montreal. Importers of Oralm Plpe*t Portland Cememt, Chunney Tops, Canada Cement, Vent lilnlngi. Water Lime, Flue Covers, Whiting, Fire Bricks, Plaster of Paris, Fire Olaf, Borax, Koman Cement, China Cla| Mnntaoturers of Beâ€"emgr Steal feota. Caaax Bed A Spriaga TEN ACRES. BEAUTIFULLY SITUATED adjoining the ooivar ationbfthe Tova of Oiiftou. The land slopM gently toward the South, aud is one of the best sitoa^ ions in Canactaf vi uit raising. Laud at opposiM aids of the r^ad is hell a $1,OOU por acre. I wulsell Uiii whole lot for ^2,Sbd. ^^ each, Uaiance at six^kad*- half per cent, secured by mortgage. Address '•Tbitth" Box IQ, Toronto, Panada. Allan Line Royal Mail SteamsMpi. Sailing during winter from Portland every Thnradaf and Halifax every Saturday to Liverpool, and in summei from Quebec every bacurdy to Liverpool, calling at Loa douderry to laud mails and passengers for SootlaDd and Ireland. Also from Baltimore via Halifax aud St. John'i N. F.. to Liverpool fortnightly during summer mooUia, The steamers of the Glasgutt lines sail during winter o« tweeD Portland and Glasgow, and Boston and Qlat(Oa alternately and during jummet between Qnebeo and Glasgow and Boston aud Glasgow every week. For freiKht, passago, or othar Inxormatioil dpply to A. Schumacher Co., Baltimore j d. Conrd Co, Haiiiax S.hea Co., Si. John't N. P. Wm. Thomson Co., St. John, M. B. AUaa Co., Chicago ;Luve Aldea, New York H. Boiirlier, Toronto AUaus, iiae Oo., Qaebeo H A. Allan r*ortlad, Boston, iloa- t.^eal _^ ._ â-  Barton's All flaallns TAB AND OLYCEBIirB SOAPI The best in tne world for all dia eases of the Skin, on Man or I Sold by all druggists. THE ALBERT TOILET SOAP 00. CARBOLIC ACID AND GLYCEBISX Is the best in the market liominionLiQeotSte Bumdng lu oonneetkia with the Ovand Trunk Bail. way of Caiiada. Sailmg from Qnebw every Satnrdaf during tbe summer raonthft, aud from Portland ereif Thursday during the winter montlu. '^Sailing datee froa ' itn;BXO TO UVERPOQb ToroBto. .Jan. IStli 89tk g-_^ __,_. ._--, 4lh n^mi^^i •* ' l«tli ikoutceid/ tfetTyn, Jan. Ist Kates of passage: Cabin, Quebec to Liverpool tBB, «60, ^, $80. Return, |90, $108, ^117, ^114, according to steamer and berth- Intermediate $35, Steerage, â- * lowest rates. The saloons and staterooms in steameis marked thus: Â¥ are amidships, where but little mobloa felt, and no cattle or sheep are carried on them. FOf partioularv apply to any Grand Trunk BaBwai local agents of the Company, or to DATID TORKANCa A ۥ.. ' â-  â-  f Qeneral Ageaft. Maaiwa. FOBIFattenlng and bringing Into condition, Honat Oowt, Oalves,Bheep aud pigs. The Yokkbhibb O.VTTLX Feeder \h nseil andrecommendedby first«laH breeders. Milk Oaitlr produce more milk and liattcf It'tattens in one-fourth the U8UU time and aavea tapd. lYicu 25 cents and $1 per box. A dollar box amtini 200 Feeds. „ HUGH MILLEB and Co., AOKICULTUBAI. CHEUIST. 167 King St Kast, Toroato. For iialv by Druggists everTwh«re. JOHNSTON'S FLUID BEEF It is tbe only jireparation of the Und wlitoh |itald» «U.^e Butritiooa. together with ttM oiumoIMin^, {iroperties of beef, and 'the 00 One which has the power to t'supply nooilA- ment tor brain, and muscle. WOOD4COOK, tacssotrtHCi â-  â-  S: GRAND DUCHIESS, 1 tOOAL^AKD WOOD RANGB, COUNTED BASE t BURNER. FOR SALE BY STOVE DEALERS HER li.

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