Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 9 Feb 1888, p. 4

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

GIIBIST The Dominion organ and Piano company. The Dominion Piano and Organ Company oseeasee the most complete menufecto in ritiah America. employs the moat ek led workmen endthe best materials and theme is no reason to believe that it cannot mennfectu-e -as t! instruments as the best in the United Ste . Aravidennn thin`. that! an mu....... 9.M_ gtI01wLN&HcvInm's 1 n's::."s;:'a:%. .?m..*'*-.;':*=*~ All-:jnI.'h.a.'!nbla. mrnnn um .33.?! pmu.o|-V sum. oi. aim Luobm. Ill! H10 088! in M10 United -53 uuu instrument As `evidence that they their extended foreign trade. their First Prizes obtained at home in competition being more than al ponies in Canada ut ot the voice ot honorable mention of the ra Company. and its proud centres made by speeches. the honorable disuincti by om-`Go `On! for Rideau Hall. creasein e press in thei do. witness long list of honorable 1 other com- together. the unanimity rm-aise; the pitrgrowth or this position in Euro public men in owne. in Piano" and a the partiality n the selec- anos for 132 of their public st and present season. the business of pgroent. Within the last three years. _ meet the extraordinnxgur-iemand for agninoent monuments, are making extensive additions buildings andhave inoreasedth` their present r nnnnl numb an _eir on conferred A vernor-General. Lord Lansd the selection of a Dominion Dominion O _ shown them y Toronto musicians i tions of Dominion Pi concerts within the la and the enormous.-in over 700 In order their in ._... ...........u.;.u nuuu1ul.uDIll,. |-Ill! uompany addition, present bull zmdhave inoreuedtheiroa Italetock to two. special prices from new II-the lat of February. end easy terms .ot-- out to everyone. All instruments wu-ran for 5' {`"m.m'.?{opem' `".3r,9`E".n`i`}`.`n'.i`.'. .?$? xectionregatnut thmtwn-Creates: enemies of ma instruments. uxo:_andJpt1sr. Send` for `price `Kit `to `Wi; Box 237. Bertie. sole onnuor the Goenw:ot-_83m ~ . 9 am %1'faas 9 `A-Tsjmirr. I TIE: Ivviuu pun-nu` c-row vu_-u,uv-' An I ran. 48 oollnnnltowllllpor. Published tron the Onion. Dunlap Street. Bath. in the Oonnty of Blmooo. the Pro- - when of Ontsrlo. Canada. ovary Thun- duy mqrnlnu. by T - sunuu. WESLEY. `PBOPBIETOII. I081 .'-nI\Ia. 4;uu vnu; llllll. AI-\llJ\/LILLLIAV, JUL) 1 BEFQRE P-FLA.T.E- --A q-ILL-- A A A _..4 _I._-_._ _ _-... __J3.----# r 4- " `.1 A L. Li Y A L .I._IJ _._ FIRST AND ONLY REPRODUCTION. AND I-*.T"if\T'\`I" 1&1 ?- i)'IJN1'.oP S"l`REE'I`, BARRIE, ran `POCKET nmncronv ran was I! now snot. Pr!oo.Iio.; Adamo: thlu0'- IV M The Choicet Brands 0: Roller, Patehts, Pastry,Family and A Stone F LOURS. _ 100 ACRE FARM TO RENT, bei Lot 1% A Oonoouion 8, Veep:-o. Aboutngo nerd _ b and half of it uuun with war! 9' otonss. . Good log house. tragaeenrn and K1115` 01?. two onto:-no and one acre of good orchnl The above in about 6 miles from Barrie. 5" near 5 good school. For further portion!!! to "3? cmuuacs oourrs. Midhux-atP.0 % Sfnrecial Prices to dealers and iothers`t`1i1<`ing' large quantities. `I00 ACRE FARM TO Lotl _g9noeuion nun! K-10 -0 as ____ _-.| _..|.|. .....c In` _--'------ . V... ._.._...._,V_..- ___`__V}.,_,.. on Muuutuoturen to inquire `into the num- ber and extent of these oombxghtionl, and to report the same 130 the Huso. In the preamble to the Vbillwili in Itsted ,thpt 0013-, tsin.iudi.vid u`a'lg nd~oorpoutionI, ongncod in manufacturing, producing, __mining, or, ' dding id home of the `nece|ia'_,:-iei of lilb 3 `and-other picfdutionl, hivb` `o'oIil5l'II6ilA' I61- THE LARGEST, THE CHOICES -I`, THE CHEAPEST, Stock of TEAS in Town. +3: ADVANCE _--.-`N13 THE; --A1vD run-- V wzaxu EMP,l_:;Ba_ . gddreu ` GOFFEES %a Specialty: 1 BARBIE. nurvrulvwli ---AND 'l'Hl-- lllll v gnnnn ' s. WIBLEV, Avnn ~FLOURS February 9, 1888, `."" 5.l"nnir |b|:)|;I.:| wu:: :, full` u ?` m 3%.: oaii axma..%?va`v``. :f.'1`naa:m: -itlu mannlltlnni nl intguunt Inn u. Ionnnnl-. 3'"o1m"" Y5 At N e 3 convict broken h -`II? \JLI to have Jq ' I-In d ":E1}em'1q omigratiu I350! \.Jl llohday. .I.llU -"= 5! ol::'.pr`i; ' '{'he C}: -.._-_ _-_,'.'.- , .__ j is; am` is in msit$.I}i.;6 3:71.}: oh} a haunt on but an iugpontive duty '01 : Government to ~prove'nt artidiul prim`: 2 such oolinbinstiong yvhethe: inthO_prioa_, human` lung` nit fnA3n'I|O_ an anal`: nu {- - Pete:-I the East I and was 1 An exp a crossing `ago and f Russia 1` onnn in % - By thb Loayenw perished. :..;f;:a;;1.| There i Jamaica Provinciq The.St. a new ph have bee _ "Wong . from the bond at "wWhile legirtvin-nnvte business it as much beyond the interference of Government ne` 5 person : religious belief or the articles of 12* ;2-. 2; 2- __.'._:p-_; ;|_--..u.~ 1- _-n _...I_ degzdv to-electiu John hsmzed 3 girl, ma ocean ma Rgchar U lad 1 While gni slide the There that that mm N31 A Bird's J L3 I.l\l\.lJ has been G14 Fe} U CV3 V\IIIIIIIUCUI`-'IC_- lII'lIIU_'ll'1UV. , J breed, ooel otfreight on goods, or in anything else whereby money..._iI extorted 1-om one else: of the oolnmuuity for the want and -enrichment of enother Aoleu. `It is true we ere" not do mueh'under'the: inuence of these -combines as our neigh- kn-Q DA} $nsAII.1lI V.`-Alli `kn:-n` 4n-nu-&u:.._- `IUCVUI Ill IV} VLVUIIVO "V7 U '-IICIII`- `" u'vgooddaqlof .1013 tho ,1-p;;g:_-qt, of that Oongreuiontl Committee, as ou- '- $7: Ulla '5`.?32':a uni over new name will be eddeclto the Bvulr Liet until the money is paid. her: now in arrears for three months will he charged $1.50 per ennum. -donoo of the extent of that trusts- tho effect 6! their opor_`utions_on_th_ot pgioes of tho srtioles they control and the re-. `ll. DREW 0` Vault V|l'I`.VIUIlI`UIl__I_IQV yachtin- of the they ebntrol the re- eultl on the public revenue ~ T ~ Tags NORTHE RN ADVANCE,` - :_ __ A4nJ-_-_____.X._r;..--_-4- "7raur.n1rJunv. , . `Juries sometimes render strange ver- dicts, when the facts are considered, and a good many would rather depend on the brains of the judge than accept the verdict of some juries. While trialby. jury is too rmly established as part of our legal ma-` chinery, to be abolished. and perhaps on the whole it answers its purpose in dis- pensing justice among men better than any other system which has as yet been devised, it nevertheless becomes a question` -whether the principle of u nenimity,;_'ex - cept in important criminal cases, should not give way to the principle of the major- ity. Mr. Justice Miller, of the United States Supreme Court, has discussed" the system of trial by jury ina late number of the American Law Review, and he does not believe in the unanimity principle. He would, in all civil suits, allow not a mere majority of one, but a specied number of jurors out of the twelve to render a legal verdict. He thinks nine jurorsout of twelve e suitablenuinber. ,!s,__ __- _ `\?___ `T-_I_ 2- was nononaus: Janus ssoanamz. ` ' The Hon. James McShane is introuble. It is charged that he is alicted with the disease which has become endemic in the `Liberal camp, and that i he was a briber general in the Laprairie election. It is alleged that he went about from place to place trying to corrupt the electorate by openly offering money for votes. `The story is that a carter named Damese Emond was called on at his house by a strange gentleman who offered him $5.00 to vote for Mr. Goyette. He refused and was oifered $10, but Emond -replied. that he would not take 8100 and vote as the stranger wanted him. Emond s wife was in the bedroom saying her prayers, when the stranger `walked in. She asked her husband who he was and what he wanted, saying that he had a good deal of etfruntery to enter herprivate apartment. . Emcnd says, as the stranger was leaving he held out his hand to him (Emond) who civilly took it, but found that two 85 bills were left in his hand.- He took the bills to the committee room, but was there advised to retain them a couple of days an_d then give them to the parish priest. The witness was told that the stranger who came to his house and offered him money on election day was Mr. McShane." Like military men who pretend to attack a certain position for the purpose of con- cealing the real point of attack, so the cry of bribery` and corruption against the wicked Tories is continued, to cover up the general system of bribery and corrup- tion which formed the plan of campaign of the Liberals `during the last election and which continues in the by elections The election courts are all _ the time un- veiling the true inwardness of Grit election methods. "Aw-writerlin'aVNelw York journal, com- menting on the learned judge's article, says : A The people of this country elect -oicers and change constitutions. legisla- 'tive bodies enact laws, and courts of justice composed of several judgesdecide points of law, not on the basis of unan_- imity, but on that of a "majority. Why should not the same principle, asageneral rule, be adopted in the jury system l We do not believe that its adoption would prove harmtul to the interests of justice ; and, on the other hand, we do believe that it would work favorably to these interests. It often happens under the unanimity principle that a single pig- headed juror, who knows more than the other eleven, defeats a verdict altogether, and renders abortive and ineectusl all the proceedings of a trial. The concur- rent judgment of nine jurors against three, if they should be thus divided, carries with it a strong probability of correctness certainly sufcieut for legal purposes " ' :-w----wj v--- --j1 Vi Yj'atA --An 5 rule, porrowere of money here to "seek the lender," o`' r inducement: and give Ample Ieeurity (or the cub they_ went. 0! oonrte. thin it all right. The thing is reverted with reference to Condo. and British cgpiuum; Theehrewd bani-i nee; men of, -the mother country want Oanede to borrow more of . their money and invest it in developing her reeouroee. The strange port of this is thet there` shrewd .. money le_tggiere_a__re ydeeigonr to -' 1'1 '?.i"`1iI?.`?19'!;.'F'? E `W L ' euihe haesheegi.repxee6nteii%o loee'.in`.;.. A ` force, their money on, g__ ognntgjy `in TEE IMPERIAL PABLIAIINT ON `I'll EUROPEAN SITUATION. The Imperial Parliament at its present session will have something besides the everlasting Irish question to deal with. It has been plainly intimated that the Irishquestion will have totakeia second- ary place` as other parts"of the Empire sadly need the attention of parliament. English and Sootoh land laws will have to heoonsidered, andthe Scotch ,0:-after questien will not break much, longer de- lay. Besides. domestic` questions the European` um jqueation`--will a `force `itself forward. Everything loolgs as though` -:`,'_.a" -In'._-___`. -.'___L _I_.:;xa- -; .!._9' . "_`,"'-"v "~"--r'*"'--"2"-'..-h;"""L l'? _"";" hexvggines of dotruct_1on,a_ng1\ It .13 zmponqnhle toning what nations will hp jnvblvbda iln inch '0` it ;will_ acid: {man a of the ;99nt.: and it; .i-. fqrtonsto that Mr. GI|"d|ton`e his` not 'th'6 uilidjn his hsnda. tlhho 'o'oc:ui;x;to1_- gaoknnnlut-*Qo~boqoon. jherig t. owqolgisinpowerto ifluutsin` tho: _l;{I 1or s ";:.:_i'Iiegr1ty of the Empire; Foal withinjtiiil foes without Wl,ll_5.$;P'`P`1 s;`1raz9ro1as!y myr-55.3; Pitt vntamp at I the . head: of . the govern-' Whether Lord Sa.li|bur`y-:.:`wf'3_l~ll -_,- ._._`---- x -. ,.. .~ .'~.,..2. '90 , Ax. .,,_5Id %;,.;.;';:..*:*.% "0ii$:ibh's:1!H=? ';9".....= lurwnfuo lavas" yquag IUULI1` DP puuugu cringe! Egrgpe `yg|[I,,ab6'git.?,-`? '1unToono the ) ' ' -- ` inning: of destruction :r'|'d`1t'? iIi|;|n|nihI.'n 4* INO'.I.'IANDO0IHIN"l'.-. _ Mr. Henderson, the `Conservative candi- date for the Oommone, in Helton, wee elected on Tuesday by e mejonzof 149 over Mr. McLeod, the Liberal oandi . I CD3 :3-Q vvsvv By citations from the psrlislnentsry sud stump speeches of gentlemen recognized as Liberal lenders during the last fteen years, it would be. easy to oonfute those who assert thst the party cannot con-Q; sistently support complete free trade. -- \ To:-`onto Globe. ' T - ` t1|_L_ _-_-_ -__.A_:_.-_I _ 1..---- -..... Tunis or -sunscnnvrxox. 01 Per Annum in Advance. $1. .1 `I- .1... _--..- --III L4 -alalgnl in flu: Ink. p.rJfli3'f'iL}`e v1'.J J{;,'3E'Ei ard, rambler, felon, feeble-minded person, _or any one rendered physically helpless and unt for the marriage relation, any person with` violent temper, or who has -forone year been a frequenter of any immoral house, or has been divorced for such causes. This is a pretty formidable list of marriages , to be declared "null and void by a legis- lative statute. There are doubtless a great many marriages that, in_ the light of economical and prudential considerations, ought not to have been contracted. But it would hardly do to declare all `such marriages null and void. ? The best that legislation can do on .this subject is to do what is practicable. and leave moral inuences to do the rest. This is good a sense, and more than this would be folly, -_-New York Independent. " ix'rnn~.=mr nil W my? rev-M--g,g,_o;>,o; .l.\.I_lUI.IU\I vnsuuvc .- ' The Globe never contained a truer sen- -tence than that. It would be very easy `for the Globe to do it. ' But, unfortunate-. ly, that is not all that is very easy to prove by citations from the parliamentary and stump speeches of gentlemen recog- nized as Liberal leaders during the past fteen years. It would be easy to prove, in thesame way. that the Grit party can consistently support protection, andtari for revenue. It would be easy to prove, by the same mode, that the Grit party can consistently support prohibition and a license law. It would be quite easy, In the same manner, to prove that the Grit party can consistently support commercial union, and unrestricted reiprocity, and the opposites of. both. It would be a simple operation to prove that the Grit party could consistently support annexa- tion to the United States and loyalty to Great Britain. It would be only play to show that Liberal leaders have, in parlia- ment and on the stump, said that con- federation has been a failure and a success ; that Riel was a sane man and a lunatic; that he ought to be hanged and that it was wrong to hang him ; that the French Canadians were the enemies and the sumer and producer pay the duty; that friends of the Liberal party ; that the con- the country was being dragged to the dogs by 'the N . P. and was prospering in spite of it ; that we should have and should not have manhood suffrage ; that the Canadian Pacic was a failure and a success , that Sir John Macdonald was a sharp, wily, cunning old scoundrel and a demented old dot-ard ; that the Conservative party had a bare majority of one and a brute majority` of forty; that Dakota was a better place forimmigrants than Manitoba and that Manitoba was a better place than Dakota ; that Mackenzie was an able leader and a pig-headed obstructionist; that Blake was the ablest leader the world ever saw, and was utterly `without back- bone ; that Sir Richard Cartwright was a mixer and muddler of gures and a cold, distant, blue-blooded aristocrat, and a heaven-born nancier and a jolly good fellow and one of the boys. -. There is no need to continue the list of things that may be proved by citations from Grit leaders speeches: there is nothing that the world ever heard of, or expects to hear of, that cannot be proved in that manner.- The Globe is quite correct in itsstatement about free trade.--Hamilton Spectator. ire bgutin in 7 onjan` tiglztenlivgucsle. . ` ~~ ~ A bill i'f2:a'i"be}3Z'EEZ'iIegi.i.tum of Kentucky which prohibits and declares ` null and void_. V - I nnA|I ,,'_ __ __-n. __ !j:_; I___.-L- I Woman.al!onthly Magazine. . This is a magazine published by the Women's Publishing 00., New York.` It is devoted to the interests of women and con tains much of a useful and entertaining nature in woman's world. The number for Fehrusrygives the rise and progress `of the Young ~ Women's Christian Association of the city of New York, wnich has done and is d0lll|l a wonderful `work for the mental. moral and material welfare of selfgsnppurtinc women. The magazine altogether _is well worthy of ublic tronane from its purity of tone an its we 1 written articles. A _ puuwu qmcuu _cu-one`: pro exonga over :`!h :ii59P9*'37A .07 9'91 [5.i9W[?d*fi`_ j; Wh0It'1d_'QPp$1.Dpil)t in Mn_.nitobs1ut-- Suturdty id`oon'(_fI'j_1o6'a`f the"blookade.. `T I`! A H%.2;*:{*gag%2:!=% :m*";W**.s.%:; : Pnrllunoht or at`t%o`uo3Tkt4_s2,'u :{ntheroi-. ` ::.;.'.*::.:.'.*.*.:.`..*~"' "' 2'; 2;.'.-.." ; .:::'"% - re-orange p as _ -:.2.'::,.9~~..-::~ addition to :11 o or powex-I` winch ' tien bepoaeooed-b th Oopanyto `to (1 issue dltlohnf Fogr ooh?` Ooi.::o nd|.`:d glegentunasgook, In $1-d:t1iI to. the mrzigmcig bus. 2 hsnco. ' erwino . Lqerta._l,num:gu,.ae`ou;ttleu_A.snd_llsh op} {hen 2:`t&.`.f'.. mu?` ":::. %.%:`$.`:.F ":a...-,.f.*.%t&; " be suhjebmd R; ID]Il.'0VBl of h proprietors.` I . ,. J .. I < o :.arc:x-hx{gu?- alannna Last Saturday, while the regular passenger train was going Iiorth onthe N. & P.'J. Diviaion of the N.` `& N._ W. Railway, the two rear ' pauenger ooaohes .lelt the track eight mileetnorth. of Braoebridge, and went down an embankment. , _E_`ortnnately no_l`ive,a _yere lost,` `hilt jthe giejengerev` fete` badly th6`pre'eent it hae"-been ? impoesib e""to learn the namee of the injured. The accident was yaugpd: by one of_ the coach wheeie ghakensup and ve ag" _ nqy iuju .i f Unto.` Nothing can be more mischievous than the fuss usually made over these candi- dates for the gallows. This unhealthy sentimentality finds its fullest develop- ment in the United States, and a writer in the New Yorlr Indepedent of February 2, under the caption of The `Parade `of the Ghastly, deals out blows square from theshoulder against this fault of Ameri- can ciyilization. He says : The atti- tude of the press and the public generally towards crime in _,this_country is such as -to impress weal: and coarse-grained minds With the idea that there is something sub- lilne and distinguished in the extreme manifestations of total depravity. The result of this infatuation, in time, will be vthe evolution of a class ot men who would anther be hung than be President." This writer further says that not long since `there were conned in the Tombs Prison of the city of New York four men, sen- tenced to be hanged for the crime of murder. An eminent clergyman of New York city, after repeated visits to these eondemnedcriminals, confessed to a friend that he found it utterly impossible to im- press upon their minds the terrible signi- cance, not only of crime unrepented, but of the sentence of death by which it was to be, humanly speaking, expiated. And why 7 Because the dramatic features of the approaching execution had been_so magnied in the minds of the criminals by re orters and others who had been al- lows , to visit them, that they come to look forward to it much as the bridelooks `forward to the marriage ceremony, as the grand and crowning event of their earthly existence, a magnicent dress occasion, gotten u for the sole purpose of ushering them wit tting eclat into the realm of AI... ..... 4... nsun|nQrv|r\-A [On Obandnndn ,,,' __ v- ---- -v-vvxu-Ia! MrI;.Ia.I1ibort9n.6:wid9V'_ 1- _1ivi!=s_ at In Nevoilymaamtdoi n! big; -d|.!99'rd o .burnlat-.-in_,lI9!:`z!Io11l.-. 8 e -crowed.` and he shot heu'iead.. V :wFI[IlV?.`ICII9o L. h "' ','u. ' . ` ` `The trial `of the murderers bf 'McL6igh I began at Winnipg on Monday. \ g n. t\L;._~_- _ns.9_I Le, 0 rvulunnv 1 Mantle. Ill` BI-IE5 VUIUQ All marriage: with an idiot, lunatic, nun`:-u6:n nnnnnn nnmnnn Gunman l`DIIIIli_ '"-_` _" -'-"""i ' Ottawa qioial airoleai are excited over" |nK.i.IL; ....`- ..`l-.'.':".2 .- _"3'h:'|` E lmi Aaumnn. -r. N-`v Accident on the N. a P. J. Railway. 7 -_A. (\_L--___I__ _I_!I_ AL. '._,_,__I__. ____, mvoroo by wnoxuuo. , L ,l-,.__ Ll. . An In: Job.` mm ;N0.BTHEBNi [AA13_%s{ANcn. `I'll DIATI PENALTY. - Two men are now under uentenceo death in Toronto for murder, one of whom will likely be renrieved, and doubt- leaa the other, the murderer of Rutledge, the'0entral Prigon guai-d,will suffer the ex- treme penalty. The question of changing the mode of execution from hangingyto death by electricity, under diacunion among our neighbors, and more especially is a change called for in the aenaetlonelum connected with condemned criminals. on whom the death penalty has been pro- nouneed. hly duorpdited by both side: of the ` |EY53?F1 $:1%A_!@.3.RA RBYVN ! -THE-- `R. A. DOUGLAS-, JEWELLER AND opmmn I Customers will nd, to theirgdyantage to call and secure some of the Bargain; Remember he Place.` R. A. STEPHENS &Y ;:o., - I'\I I I t'\T'\ 1`.lI'Il\`I\I1rI1 1` - --_ Offers to those suering from defec- tive sight his crystal spectacles, su perior to any other in use; constructed inac- cordance with the science and phil- osophy of nature`, admirably adapted to the organs of sight, and perfectly natu- ral to the eye, affording altogether the best articial help to , the- human eye ever invented. ' it They can be worn {with perfect ease for any length of time at one setting `giving astonishing olearneaeof vision by candle or other articial` light, and comfortto`the epectaole wearer hereto- fore unknown. t .01 water.` - me ---u. .u- uvunu vr uI.I;yIIDuuI|vUlII!l. 1' 56-Korea `:71, ft 73v$tn. ;a. ne'v`_'o ntnn qt:-mm `d a an *. -- . A `.a"f%`-Tr"n. mm ;x.1u.'.'"' ...';,m," dune. tum; with _ b9;Qlt0u':t0hde:D unison oordao wooduoh you-,' Fbr "mink m`JAmIm.r in `3i`r`&?1`n` &':?.?.5 :`uua" 'v'}'xe'n`"L" ' ' ..go.% ::n:'._3%v'`7.: :...:.':......'=_ "me: DIAMOND HALL! UIIUIII Wllvll HIIIIII UDGWU IIIIIV vssw avwssu vs the unseen. . Furthermore (to the `innit scandal of the clerg man) it seems there had been a rivalry or the conversion of these men between several Catholic arrests, a Methodist exhorter, some lay workers, and a delegation. of ladies from one of the fashionable chwrchss of the metro- -polis. The latter, at the time of the clergyman's visit, had succeeded in cap- turing one of the distinguished criminals by the bribe of a first-class funeral, with owers, music, a broadcloth suit, a white necktie and the services of the most at-tis-. tic undertaker on Manhattan Island. The other gentlemen of the gallows were hold- ing out for extra inducements. There is but one `remedy, and that is to draw the black cap of total extinction, moral as well as physical, over the crimi- nals head from the moment when the sentence has been pronounced until his body has been disposed of forever." N'l`kn nhmnnnnnrn vnnnl-. ntnn mnnwinn `balance. 13.30 1nnmu.--`Ian money turbo ` 3` frurther part! `d kn vrn` on any ot Io liostionto T . Mcc .'.I*,H PEEL ? . name, January such. asp. POOII wlthonuntu-oat.'. .: d dandluoni " `bo- sue. 'ortn1:hbm - nan; c.mmr vnd`3va ao`1_1ogi_egra o9-woven no at ,III.o co; 1 her` ulna TON, 19:01 . 0.. `In! A 1251 for the nail nnb . 0-. ___..-.__...u , -7: ___._V._._. - -uu-.-u-_u-.d olive! . by JOSEPH nooins. Anotionoot. V the to.I.1ow- jng ulnablehrxn ro?Qr:yd|,h&l`=g com at v posed . . 13' ten! .1111. 1 `ti: p 3: Inpi:a1.1n*:ue'0oun`*`:sitnsl(z nooe': oontaihg one hundred winoreocleu. x V !l'hlu.valueble 2?? _ted shoot nv miles from the owir , 0. nyenlent railway station. school and oh on. &o.. and has erected thereon a frame dwellln ho fume hm-n Avid` nnlmnlnngnl-_.lum-a- 1.- 1-.. W3 nan: um untxmgllatnoxl 8 8 `c *0 VI 0 ' 'rERs.=-71` ~ per cont. `mount tnrhingld !At'I:I|A than Ili .l."All-M. TU ll-lli '1'--.I.3 3. C011. 5. pt About 90 acres clear- : coral: and stones. am-an bf t'nll~w satin- .3. Ingram fnlllna gnu. iii"o?-'ooKtFd"1';II'or7o'>'z:" Tun` '8"&'v'$'8l'1'i'n Ea fume barn and an implamontvhouse. he In in in 3 mad sum of nnltivnjnn . we wAnnANI_A1LsmIAcLEs] R. _A. DOUGLAS, J TOWN 0!` BA 1;un.uuA.LV1'1'u ruwnm ul?A8A1aE contain. ed in a certain mo ` ' ' iwwhloh default ;*,:'.`:'n%":'.*a*".:;"** "` `:';.1s'9.:s:.`:..:* 0 In . 0; .- ., . 0 Autlo; at tho" -nave bOTHL; `in the at 18 o'clock noon. on- n.-_. - .43 ...-. "uni- CALL In in ,. v. 4---`, IVALUABLEFARMPBOPEBTYI I-ICU IIIVI Us The ideas of the writer `are assuming I practical shape as the commissioners ap- pointed by the Legislature of New York to investigate the most humanemethod of executing capital punishment recommends that no `account of the details of an such` execution, beyond the statement of t e fact that such convict was on the day in ques- tion executed according to law at the prison. shall be published in any news: DIPOP. I ` OOKBINIBI " TRUSTS " AND " RINGS. I (11%- A,- II PURBUANTVTO Powldn 0!: saw oon`e .;n`. a. mortQ_a'b:`i.n_-whlol; actually` Inna Iusnn IIIQAA --J --Ll- -.l - ...__ -- A- J - saeaeamiia1Iui'r1`a7a`&f"f:i2;'g: Lu rnumnn nnn-ulna A..-u-....-- n.- 4-: MORTGAGE SALE TOWNSHIP (ii: .INNI1_'I L! In 1-2:: pouxmjr oir 3910013." aouomc FARM 'ronm`N'r- .. . .' . Townah1n.otViniin. About IMMENSE BARGAINS ! IMMENSE BARGAINS! IMMENSE BARGAINS! Bp'rnwnu. a*'Bmck, BARRIE; :. A.S'l`EPENS 3; 009s. HUM lulu Uvvu uouyvnwu In suavuvnu '1`he newspaper; must stop weaving their arsbeaqueu around the purgetorial horrors of our institutions of justice. We l must have a gallows without a. Dore ; we must have police records without a J alien _Be_v[thorne. " :.1___ _r LL- __2L-_ _..- -__.-...2_.. In llllDlClOlIF'X' ac: cultivation . `nap Anne; .45! "00 V ' L. D wim " ulllzn has tn nllnltnnflnw '3' 3- TYPE, -2- ----Is %()I-"F'2E.'.TZFI.I]Sl'(3`--- (succnsson TO THE LATE B. HINDS) --%-IS oJ-:-'-:|:-'-}E1=z.I1Vrc;-- (SUCCESSOR TO THE LATE B HINDS) ----Is OFFERING--- un. . . , v . '1 H` . urn! n;lmmn1:?lh:l!: At `lent the Combines and Trusts`,- which have become almost universal in the manufacturing and other bueineu of the people of the United States, have at- tracted the attention of Congress. A bill has been introduced in the House of Re- prelentetivec ; authorizing the omgnittee ,1 A ___-_ L. __ _- -._L_ LL- _ ... [SUCCESSOR TO THE LATE B. HINDS) NOW some on, AT We can give so much for the money 1 Thousands any this in their letters It is because after plates are made it costs far less proportionate! to` ' 1; 150,000 ' ' ~ mu`, any yea, existence the 7 Dan copies than 100.000. Uunng in AM_l_ER|_0AN _ AG Bl GULTU R I ST has absorbed twenty-four` other cultural periodical `.1 " ti Authority on agricultural matters t e world over. With?h:I:)xd $3:R%2e?1irt2nb:1:2?..rff25E.gz.?e nu auuorueu twenty-xour other a cultural penoaipals. and continues to be the recognized cultural world With the old sta of editors who have made it a power in hot hemispheres. reinforced with new writers. it will he more valuable during 1888 than ever. Each number now contains nearly one hundred original illustrations and onginal articles on the Farm. Garden. Hearth and Household. from over fifty different writers. rice $l.50a year; single No.. 150. ' EIIDIQT 03%. = sing-uqvv D8-Delf. tubes. 1 painter of these great works. now attracting world-wide attention. vurnu IJIJDJJQJ. Il1.'l_`l.ilOO American Azriculturist (Eng, or German). with choic- of pictures. and our new volume. fun published. entitled Our Homes; How to Beantify Them, beautifully illustrated, bound in c on: 13:51:30 gold, price 81.!!!-all post-paid, for 81.60 OR. the same, with both pictures. all post-paid. for Send postal for snecimen "number. English or German, full description of New Books presented to old and new subscribers. and full description of the Pictures. and Portrait of Munkacsy, the (`I A -1.-1-T-n - .-u.-.--- ._': gsmon you `WONDER WHYTM. |aT U'1i-vlun?aa`nd..of`gldu~`!n g Q on also out .m.;-'r: 9' mad walooma at all thun- HOVUSE. PAINTING . H 3 GLAZING. suou AVll_I lTlN0. ac. I!1?HATlN6 &- Fmninausnne A `.: _._. not only iujuriously sfeot commerce be- the purpose of controlling or curtailing the production or supply of the ssme,.snd thereby mcressing their price to the peo-_. ple, which combinations sre kuowh ss.`j Jessooistions, trusts, pools and the like nsmes. V Such combinstions (it declsres' tween the states. but.imps_ir thegrevepues _ of the United Ststel as derived Tromits " duties on imports. ` ` .

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy