Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 14 Jun 1883, p. 7

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 •v:..3K^" " ^=^ ^•sr^"E5-~'^inE!^f«""H5WE»"i,N ,ij|w«|Biyi 'j,ti^'^fsr'w-9 ^mes up, how is ^r animala »ttaU luestion we sh^l «] "•ing. ,. Thu gpri," 3 and liberated, la ny other form, i- Every movementl from a base unli "ce. Tha coiled wl â- ovm, becomes a soU efl let loose, the M '^se, which is tlie I lU force to the firJ L and so in succesjij i3 Its force after tl 1^ the outside base sely the case in " forelegs and head i. shoulders, the powJ straighten thecnr f;",.a the hips, whi, luzclea through ti ver the longest levf add the lastimpeti )oting ahead like i flexibility is btaaS menagerie when tn across the cage aq er it. The head aJ jfully curve overti cend on the opposa letus is given by tl ' aliahti gendf as veight, concnssioai I WOMEN. ;ny Till pes. household isamerr "iio?c spirits are J or little disappoii c h '.nan kindiiei i hi lie of prosperit; irk jst hour brighte^ 3 piece ot suQsiii) am of her smiles, tlj :ier looks and mofj The children f something great isband goes mto " spirit. No matl lar oiT her presenj -a to himself, .KEKPESS. be willing tas?aa 3r obligations uaa takii g charge o: lersoa "as said thi ire in themselves i exercise of no mef any lady has enon md the arts, sentiment, and W 2T female college wholeaomfl dep iiy. ot the eldest c_^„ has beenforcedj 1 personal ler old *^fl-j- g mistress «* " and trouble " pon her i°*'?^.| rith this aifflf**j bsolete sincfl »• ?T 6 will be «»PP^ auxietiea reqj"'â„¢ lae that th« *J* 1 times to ji» jflft rosi INVAUDi.' lafeâ- Â»â- Â«t»»«*-^"v j,yjUaET C0B30H. g^e and Poultry. 3-^ â-  seneral rule holds good that r-il* demost wholesome, and that '^, in animal flesh used for food ia l^'*) ,5yniptoii.s of irritant poieon -- an advanced dtion without any j^eroep- i*"' to the epicure. Microscopic ex- ""^•ineat which has boen exposed ""^jl'm summer temperature, from f«fldnce line ' for three or four days, F '"development at that stage of a rn^iim, termed by physiologists 'vibrio. Tnis parasite seercs to be i* ij other richics- parasite meats than pork, and, yjnot destroyed by the pro- "Sand smoking meat, or of cur- brine There is no reason to sup- '*!t the fleibcf game is exempt from " ceot 'hii natural pi-oduct of de- "^3 When meats containing it are ^;, 'cooked, their consumption pro- rtstric uisturbance, somtimes fatal t ^t. As game is generally broiled f'^i 'tiie action cf intense heat may Kjj'j septic iulluence of the organism. firistison suggested the habit n:ight I Jo with the impunity with which jould consume high meat, as it- has with those savage tribes who tr'i fijli and flesh but he also noted jiy Lthat the use of game only " high " Xlto please a gourmand produced se- Ksstinal disturbance with persons un- Ljied to eat it." Dr. Lethby says that Lfith some the slightest oommence- [(idecay is si'rficieiit to cause disgust, itibiol'.ite physical derangement, with ipiijuaut touch of decay," such as sntiii ripe cheese and high game, ia Isbiectiouable. Certainly venison is tiUy eaten at a point of decay at which ^Id be rejected, and long-hung _mut- also favored. Several eminent aalhorities consider that cooking iizes the efi'ect of decomposition in la a considerable extent, and that the Ltic properties of the gastric juice fsrther counteract it. But even epi- ' ina the decayed fish so much enjoy- •hose savages "advanced," as Dr, fcjoiisays, "iuthe cultivation of this 3:nt of gastronomy.' tre considered this rather unpleasant satiength with the hope that when 3 ordered for an invalid the caterer \f. iEOuced to supply it as fresh as As a ru!.; the flesh of game is less lad tough thau that of domestic ani- L that there is not the same reason Ittin? it in ord'.r to lot it become ten- the first action cf decomposition. la also more dir^cstible than butcher'a- jiaiiror that reason may be eaten Its co:t)parative freedom fi'om fat relatively more nutritious, while Itise tiivor is tciiipting to the apps- liithe ta.itc o; the flesh aad blood of itvAx 'dLutical, the latter is ge- ;care:uily preserved in cooking, H3 i? tiic most digestible of wild |.adt'ie best known, although bear, and antelope are highly esteemed lii-er.iDs of the country where they Anior.g tlie small game rabbits ?x:i are both dige.slible ana nu- ,.'1 r'f Mare; liave a darker ana censer Ireless i:i;^c.-;tib!e unless long hung, ::re highly flavored and stimulating ijiteir., iiiuj more nearly resembling â- vir.cj.t. .Aa no large game \i now I rtu;ir); 1-; 3 are g:vej! ior cooliing fjiEe uira; when prepared for the lirejiore digestible than large game, ptihcr :a; either lies close to the skin, i-ost ia cocking, or is removed with I'esdae.^ of the larger varieties. The Jjirda contain less blood than the ani- ad arc thus more delicately flavored, 3 are Eot for this reason less nutri- |! -;e game birds are more highly fla- •iin domestic fowl, and richer in firiKng elements, but the more com- f itureoi their flesh makes it necessa- p them longer before cooking than "h.chmay be cooked directly it 'iiile the iicsh of bcth game |a poultry !3 mere deficient in red laaa that of onimals, it abounds in ppnates, a-;d therefore is a valuable ' aervoui invalids. The flesh of [;rcsisniorc (iigestible than that of ' hecausa los.s dense, and also be- â- â- /â- â- 'e eorapaiativc absence of fat. It sjeiv mere economical, because it ^-" available food in proportion to ihefitsii (f the breast cf birds is ^-â- rest,aiid that of the back and. legs -•aly Savored. In both game and -ae land birds are tenderer and |~?-8tib!e than water-fowl of the larg- -aless the latter are long kept. If Ptreastof wild water-fowl is eaten ^â- â- i3bestv,-hcn fresh. -^"pr of snipe, plover, and wood- ' ncter than that of quail and part- "'tjoth tl-.c latter are general favor- '!«antof tiieir abundance of deli- l'^* meat. Prairie chickens and [^darker in flesh. All whitfe-flesh- '"ds should be well-cooked, the â- J* °^^^ "^ay be served undJerdline r ••rred. This is notably the prefer- [«»CMivaa-back ducks, which are suf- • «K)ked by roasting from twenty to '•"'e minutes. ,^^ birds in season during the sum- ".^ f?"ows Mayâ€" snipe, plover, ^a^' "' "'^^ Equabs and pige- j* affords the same varieties, with i^ghsh pheasants. In July only ?«and pigeons are fresh all other sale are refrigerated. In Au- tate Virginia reed-birds, plovWi a- y Woodcock in abundance, and f lideficiMit ia.fa%he»tf^l^';!. highly flavored.* bat tnii- «.ti»*I«u Tv"â„¢*" which e«a be ^Jr^^^f*^*"' ohfckens'ih'd ^tS^*^^*I~"'*^*o'*nse in all cases otnupau-ed digestion; the flesh of dSS ^dgee,e IS less digestible, and should bS be used 13 weakened conditions of the di gestive organs. Poultry may be p^^ ^Jt•"^^"l^°^^^^« byboilLgorSS «fre being taken to serve it frfe from^t! are given A few good recipes for cookiiig it below tood tmUable for use m early convalescence; and in ^erally debilitated phyiic'al cmdi. medii bones tTAf^k""-^"'^^^^"""^* crush the wme m small pieces, and »^.* ^A u °®* ' remove all fat, dus the meat and bones into a saucepan with two quarts of cold water and twoteaspoonsful of •alt, cover the saucepan so that no steam can escape, and cook the chicken slowly for hve hours then strain the broth through a line botting-cloth sieve, or a folded towel laid in a colander, return ic to the fire ia a clean saucepan, and boil it, uncovered until It u reduced about one- half, or until a little of it cooled on a saucer forms a jefty Then season it palatably, and cool it m earthen moulds wet in cold water. Serve It in small quantities, either cold like jelly, or heated to form a broth. CiiicKEx WiSK Jelly.â€" (a nuiritioiu, di- qestibe food, alig/Uly aUrnulating, excellent in convalescence and in general weakness Qf the entite »i/stem).~Prepre this jelly according to the directions given in the recipe for chicken jelly, allowing it to boU until the jelly IS tound to be quite stifl' on cooling a little of it then add to it the strained juice of a lemon and a gill of good sherry or Ma- deira wine, and cool it in earthen moulds wet in cold water. Use it cold, CmcKEsSovFVLn.â€" (alight,digeaiible/ood, very palatable and nutritious, useful in any illness where any animal food is aUowed by the physician).â€" Remove all skin and bone from the white meat of cold roast chicken, and chop half a pound of it very fine then rub it through a fine sieve with a potato- masher. Next mix together in a saucepan over the fire one dessert-spoonful each of butter and flour until they are smoothly blended, and gradually stir into them oae and a half gills of boiling water let this sauce boil for one minute, then mix with the chicken, season it palatably with salt and pepper, and stir it over the fire until the mixture is scalding hot, when remove it from the fire. Beat the whites of three eggs to a stiff froth, and the yolks to a creL^m have ready some small paper suffle cases, or some small dishes suitable for serv- ing at the table quickly mix with the chicken first the yolks and then the whites of the eggs. Put the mixture at once into the cases or dishes, and bake the souffles for fifteen minutes in a hot oven. Serve them hot as soon as they are done. â€" Harper's Bazar. MOSSSLS FOK SUNDAY TION. CONTBMPI.A. Wild :quabs, pigeons, and part- ?»ii Travellers chr.ngc their guineas, not their characters. Put not your trust in money, but put your money in trust Faith always implies the disbelief of a lesser fact in favor of a greater. Controversy equalizes fools and wise men in the same way â€" and the fools know it. God bless all good women To their soft hands and pitying hearts we must all c jme at last. The only Broad Church possible is that which has its creed in the heart, and not in the head. You may set it down as a truth which ad- mits of lew exceptions, that those who ask your opinion really want your praise. There are a good many real miseries in life that we can not help smiling at, but they are the smiles that make wrinkles and not dimples. Why can't somebody give us a list of things which everybody thinks and nobody says, and another list of things that every- body says and nobody thinks Memory is a net. One finds it full of fish when he tokes it from the brook, but a dozen miles of water have run through it without sticking. If the sense of the ridiculous is one side of an impressible nature, it i«. very teell but if that is kll there is in a man, he had better have been an ape and stood at the head of his profession at once. We must have a weak spot or two in a chartwter before we can love it much. Peo- ple that do not laugh or cry, or take moie of anything tha^ is good for them, or use anything but dictionary words, are admira- ble subjects for biographies. But w e don't oare moht for those flat-pattern flowers that press best in the herbarium. There are three wicks to the lamp of a man's life b»in, blood and breath. PreSs th9 brain a.Uttle, itaUfeht goes oat, foUowed by both the others. Stop the heart ainini^ and; out go,*U three of the wicks. Ch(*B^ the air out of the fungs, and presently the fluid cew*a lo supply the other centees of flame, and all is soon stagnation, cold and darknfiSB, y?«r game birds ate coq.kel whole ' 'he feathers being removed^ and {*d with a wet towel tbiyr but never washed' and are iiuout any stuflang or water in the ^oranges sliced, green salad, or «e usual garnishes for game. 1 uJt "^^ are either roasted over a IC^" '^°°* being drawn, or are "tou ^^^' °^ troHed, and then J'^f mme birds are suitable food „, ^^}^^' for patients daring con- hi, '" ^^l ixcept feverish condi- ' -J'-km. An indorstng Tnk which' does not ary ouioklY onthejpad and is quiOkly ta^an by 'tS^wr U thuTmade Aniline oolffl: in '«)?arts; glyeeri*. J.P»f*«j; ,«°^, "^^'jj partT mcoloti^jdM^vedm hoc walw „ D the i.ther iMjrSaieftts a«^»dd?d whfle fSe ^ater ^:b^in».a«itated Thi»i«4ow^ lpi» taii^ik«q»reiits goofl quality fi*m the addition of the symp^ ,:., r^ Por«.i«fcfnl fa4iei-*stob -ior woed W Btone thU is the proposed V^V^^l Twenty litres of quicklime are alak^d^ suTtoble vessel. One gramme of snl^te or -^r«idjB««nmeofcon^nion aSltmreadd- fitUJMri anf^ka. A ve^ bean. Snliawn co^r ii.n^iwed.bi- addiM*o aSonTcolor is d«^'?F^*'^„^g?^ rmber'«wl V ^*Sp bilfik, my be^^ Siffi: ^coAAonlrush may oe i^m J applying the wash. ^. f^ r • '^^^ ^fP^TT* T U doing a nq fiigher mtothe cUsaes. which might facerilad in EDgliab phnaeology the *^ • lower mid^HuM;, midd** classes, " one has It stilHQmedBpailiSin that the demand y*.% -?^V!'t*l'"' IBl|Nrt |?Nia»r can hopeip cnnvv. Yoa ttiter a hooae and are at nice stmck by the utter bamimess and inhoa- pital look of the place. The walls are bare of any decoimtion save whitewash and the portrut or imigc of a saint or so. £he floors are generally tiled, and bare as the walla^perhaps a few strips of rusli matting may be strewed around; byt such *»re notal- ways to be found. The foi-uiture consists of a table usually laden with a heap of taw- dry grass ornaments of t^e most unaesthetic description. The chairs have none of the grace, but all the discomfort of a "Queen .Ann." In a bedroom you may occasionally find a mattress; but not always â€" rush mat- ting is used quite as frequently. The pil- lows are made to look pretty, with embroid- ered cases and Bofordi {and that probably is the only print ycm «an^6b«erve that sean» to indicate even a desire for elegance. "Home," in the old-fashioned sense, does not exist in Mexico any more than the word, or any correlative of it, exists ia the Spanish languago. A Mexican dresses himself and his iiorse. He makes a brave show, but his wife can only show herselfroccasionally, and his children go as they please. If /te can look well and cut a dash, his moiest wishes are gratified. I would not, of coarse, have it inferred that home luxury is un- known. In the larger cities you may en- counter all the elegancies of life. Bus the possessors of them lorm a class apart. They are intensely aristocratic in their notions, su that their poorer fellow citizens have rarely an opportunity of havin? their appetitns whetted by seeking these things that make home beautiful and desirable. If they were to see them now they would regard them as unattainable, from the enormous prices they command in this market. But it may be taken for granted that when the country generally shall have become acquainted with the ordinary methods of living among the Northern nations; when the implements of civilized housekeeping shall have been in- troduced into the country under better con- ditions than are at present given by the -ab- surd regulation of the Custom House, the demand for these wdl be enormous, and the advantages ofiered to the dealers ia every conceivable sort of every-day commodity, will equal for a time the most glowing that can be found in the history of the world's commerce. Everything has a beginning, and ihe be- ginning of this new revelation can be ob- served by any one who has eyes in his head, at this present momQpt in the City of Mexi- co. The miserably appointed notels are learning that in order to gain the patronage of people accustomed to all the modern lux- uries of the north, they must present them with something better thou was considered good enough for a ranrJiero, or even an abo- •jado (lawyer) ou his visit to the capital. Creature comforts of all sorts are provided, that in short, years ago, could hardly have been obtained for love or money, The rush of immigration will surely come soon, and every letter that is published in the States or England on matters of Mexican com- merce gives it a little extra push. Those who are already in the field are reaping a golden harvest. The demand for most things far exceeds the supply; and prices are con- sequenty enormously exaggerated. That cannot last long. Crowds of people are to- day making preparations to get some ad- vantage out of this excessively understocked market, and they who get here first wi;l be the best off. GABNEBSO WITTICZSBIS. A household pet A car-pet. In a crowdâ€"" Who is th»t man "' "Oh, he is one of the most prominent Irish-Ame- ricans." " Who is that other one " " He is a distinguished German-American." "And that one?" "A well-known French-Ame- rican." "And that one over there with a bundle under his arm?" "Oh, he's a no- body â€" nothing but an American-Ameri- can." A Texas paper tells this cheerful tale of the experimental school of medicine "A woman came to a prominent physician and asked for a remedy for her husbaud's rheu- matism. The doctor gave her a perscrip- tiou and said ' Get that prepared at the drug store and rub it well over your hus- band's back. If it does any good, come and let me now. I've got a touch of rheuma- tism myself,' " " I'es," said the culprit, "I'm a thief, but I don't want anybody to insinuate that my crime was the result of unfortunate stock speculatinn, and I won't have any- body say that 1 have hitherto borne an un- blemished reputation. I have been a thief from infancy, and never bought' a share of stock in my life. Call me eccentric, if you please, but I don't want tj be mixed up with any of your amateurs. I am a profes- sional, lam." Too sober to shoot At the recent pigeon-shooting at Houston, a gentleman who had claimed to be a oraok shot missed six successive birds, and hia di«gasted friends, who bad been bettinn on him, were mad enough to drown him, " What kind of shooting is that V asked one of them in- ctignantly. "I know it's my fault. I am too sober. No sober man can t^tpetit hit oirds that fly so crooked. H 4,h** *hree more beers I'd have scattered feathers, and don't yoa forget it." ABKE ft Ey^NiS* INTSaNATIOKAIi Bonn QtunpoiUMl eradicates scale qxun lemlaritantly. QnefonrdiUieflrstdosfBine- iPSHtsliUritelnoraststion. PettaearsaM, aad saves SS per oeBt.iafiML Send far ctoenlar to dOI St. jPa^ atJesttManoml, bole MVi "W^^C! A VARIKTT OF THE iVi3l iLTlTiliB celebrated ' £iabe " of liie " Kewcombe " laanoat some TOU THE niMIEYS, UVERANO UBINART ORMNS THS B^ST, BLOOD PURinKR. aaii«yiy«ai«way br whlek a«rfl^ «sn k« fMfA, and (ImU la by rg â€" yif fjnai •t Ihe *iF deelacs tkat Is Om •nly way by whldi health can k« «•• MM«. Bcr* Is wiMM WAXWBX'S 8CF/I OUKB kas acUeved lu neaS i«»nta(lMi« â- t acts «lMe«lT npsn tke kMneys and llvw and by nlartng Vkmm In a hsalthy esndlUan driTss ilssass and pain ftsi tks sjslsas Vnr aU Kldnsy, Uverand lltlM«9trs«Hss i " l ss r d *w af wr sien t ite leal trnnbl*^ tweraHy. Mas nn a««al. liewar* •f fmpsatsiSt In" saMtobsJnalas KABsns oraB. VavsalabyaU H. H. WARNER CO., W1BK£X1 BATS M' SindE ILLKK'a MAJ^-APPLK TONIC POSI- TIVELY cures Liver Complaint and Dys- pepsia. Write forfree pamphlet, or mail 50c, for package. E. MILL E R CO Dresde n. Ou t. ilfATAUCC Send for free illustrated cats, fffllUnCOa lo«:uetoRYRIE,theJeweler- 113 Yo Bge Street. 'I orento. a WOOD «CO., OAKVILLEâ€" MANU FACTUKERS of outside and inside ds. Sash, Doors, and Mouldings. Send for prices. OakviUe, Ont ^_^ O' NTARIO VETERINARY COLLEUK, TO ONTO. Students can enter from October until January. PROF, SMITH, S.,V, Edin., PrincipaL Fe PROF. SMITH, 'ees. fifty dollars. ARflFIOIAL LIMBS EIatSX^K able. Light, Elastic, and Cheap, First prize at Provincial Exhibition. London, Testimonials on application. Satisfaction gruaranteed. Addres" J. DOAN v SON. Drayton, Ont. General Financial Agency. Sums of from $200 to $50,000 to invest in Pa tent Rights, Business Chances, Manufactures, Hotels, Saloons, ard any kind of mercbanteble or exchangeable property, J. I. EVANS t CO., Leader Lane. Toronto. The Oldest and Most Reliable TEA HOUSE IN ONTARIO Establialied 1843. Where you can select from over 50 varieties, grades and mixtures, put up in 5, C, 10 aiMlI2 lb. canisters, as per price list, or in original packages of SO, 40 and 60 lbs, ear^h, at the lowest wholesale prices. Five lb. caddies or more sent carriage prepaid to any express office in Ontario or Quebec. ED'WARD LAWSON, Victoria Tea Warehouse, 93 KING STREET EAST, TORONTO. Ally a tfwt tithe In n8e,and folly wanaated« Al« BO Beo(md-faaacl pianos by Donuam, vose. Great Union and other makers, from 950 upwards for cash, easy payments, rent Or exchangee. OC- TAVIU8 NKWUOMBB « CO.. aw. Chnrch Richmond streets. Toronto. John Hall, Sen., M. D., â- OIMEOPATHIST, BLC.P.S., 33 and 35 Btchmond Street, East, Toronto. Office hoursâ€" 9 to 10a.m. and 8 to i p.m.; Sun* day, 5} to 6^ p.m. Also in the evenings of Monday and Tnursday, from 7( to 9. MO STKAUi 0!f THK SHOrU»EK OR BUTTONS WHKST STOOPING. Send 25c., 35c, or 50c, for sample pairs Athletic Suspenders. TURNER BROS., 774 Cralgstreet, Montreal, and 7S6 Washington street. Boston, Mention this paper. CHA2CPI01T STUMP AND STONE LIPTEE The Strongest, Lightest.Cheap- est and Best. Will do the wore of S men and 1 horses, 'for price etc. Address 5. S. KIMBALL, 577 CRAIG STREET, MONTREAL. Agents Wanted Everywhere for the sale of the already justly GELEBEATED GMTHAM WAGfOfOH, having the improved arm and climax truss rod applied to the axles. The cheapest and at the same time guaranteed the strongest and easiest running farm waggon made in On- tario. Correspondence solicited. Address OMtliain Mannfng. Co., (Limited.) Chatham, Ont., 7th June, 1883. Dominion Line of Steamships. Running in connection with the Grand Trunk Railway of Canada. Sailing from Quebec every Saturday during the summer months, and from Portlgpa every alternate Thursday during the winter months. Sailing dates from Quebec :â€" Ontario, 3.3rd Jnne. I Noatreal. 14th July, Dominion, »Olli ' Toronto, 2l8t ' On-gon, • Tib Jaly. I Sarnla, iiStli " Katesof passage Cabin, Quebec to Liverpool, §50, 360, $65. $80 return, |90. $108. $117, $144. according to steamer and berth. Intermediate, $40. Steerage, $24. The saloons and staterooms iU these steamers are amidships, where but lit- tle motion is felt, and no cattle or sheep are car- ried on them. For further particulars apply to any Grand Trunk Railway Agent, or local agents of the Company, or to DAVm TORKAKCE A CO., General Agents, Montreal. iNFECTi yREGOLD JDfob i Xy and NERS USE TO THE TRADE E. O-A-EEIB CO., -WHOLESALE- Haberdashery, Staple Fancy Dry tioods Merchants Haying leased their premise?;, and agreed to give possession at an early date, the whole of their Stock B«soued Crom Agonlxlm: Deatb. New YoRX.-*Mr. J^mii Tf£«.llfe2 Broadway, fwrmerly chJef -initonfftor' in Dipkel's Kiding School, in this cityv add to a newspaper reporter "I broke'ai^lAwdd: ,«r,arm and elbow, splittn^ the, sd^^t in four parts, Bhenmatism set in ^fid^ t enl* ployed the best physician. Ste lanwl^jjFeijy- thuBg, hot I gz«w wois^ voi, vi Imk he -, ^d ' I l^vaone mem' uuag to tnrAad il that fails nothini; can give you reuef, and that is St. Jacobs Oit' Iwwi thi^nes* ndn-reliever, and am abls-teP«8*"Mywn, irfeii from all rheumatic ti^ble. l^^ve also recommended tlie riei^ 'M w^ijAtx speedily aadiMfctnaUy^art*. ,^.,„bni .mn- ' ' ' ""' " " " ** !^' %\ '.â- â- â- '^^ rr,^' Mits Jennie Ace, l^htboMMka^ara- damrhter-on tks Ekig^isli eoast* ' iWs jsaft'tii-^ odml fMNB tb* Ba^rsn ^i«rfM « 'g«HF brobdi worth fiftr guMlMA M|t^ Kir braipe '-esfse OlfcDOat'ie^* ^Liberal Trade* Discounts on each line of goods throiigliout. 12 14 Wellington St. E., Toronto. WHY PAY High prices for Silks and Dress Goods when you can buy them at Wholesale Prices at PETLEYS' WHY PAY High prices for Ladies' and Children's Paxasols when you can buy them for 25 cents and up at PETLEYS' WHY PAY .Fqity to fifty ceats per yard for jTapestry Carpets •^Hen you can buy the same for thirty-five cents per yard at u PETLEYS' jf^te);;dppa*is pet y^d Ipr Axminster Carpets, when ^^ xwoi^btiy the same for " one dollar fifty" per yajd at PETLEYS" w«rtA»-A ?w d^cte' pac eiuldbr Boys' Clothing when W^m0^^^^^^^^ per sTiit at __^^ ««.«r^ 128 TO 132^g!tfir T. E., TORONTO. «!"• 'i\-y i: » '^â-  I I i m i-i â-  â-  I l^ â-  ' â-  • i -/ -I â- . m i ^idiJi. i«^JiLhi.^^hit;j.

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