Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 3 Apr 1884, p. 7

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 PARAGRAPHS. 1 4ntHeri)â€" A Jealons Hiis- """'"t c ,01.1.' t Inhabitant- ""^;: UU'ins^^^ Horse- Buried Alive- L V man Ca'.iH'li'-^ clergy ro longer op- â- 'â- â-  ,irn «t'i^'h is becoming very com- „f tj-c great exhibition to take ^-^"'tntvrerp'^txt year have LeencK- work will begin nex: " jjjg 1 ghta on the hieh mists at -^ v- CjI, can be distinctly sepu ,.f4'i3l!iDd of Sin Clemento, eighty 'â- .'.utatsea. ttion signed by 10,000 Saotchmen f the abolition of the feather bonnet f""'British army is to be presented in gment very shortly. L 1 )Ddon Medical Time.f says that a â- ' ddea'.lis nave been probably caused f^'Ikcsness as to dairy drainage and i'.dIv io: one that is traceable to jiteratioD. newspaper columns headed "Born,' r,fjed, ' and "Died," have been various- hrased in the West. One paper has |!f[jtched, Matched, Dispatched," andan- "'Bud3, Blos.oQis, Cyprets." ealous husband blapped a man's face ji (.vidence atrtet car because the man's 'JaJ been ataricg at his wife's face. ;ar stspped a bl; ck further on, and a Vrl entertd and led the man away. OS totally blind. troit has Leen boasting of its oldest in- '^â- ^:. There seerna to be no doubt that I icj vtars old. He was bam on S'.. •'kks i'-iy- l"' ^^' was in the Irish â- iiiD of ""*â-  Ho drinks whiskey and f ij3 a black ;iaa wicked-looking pipe. tac tntet of the Southdown foxhounds [Fortslade, in V.oa, and, the other day, a J T.Dt straight tor I'oynings, ran into .v:ich, anu took r;luge in the pulpit. tTis quickly 1 rjught out of the sacred •eand turaed l(;cae, when he was im- :;a:ely run into by the hounds and kill- l;iiD named Chenworth, who lives in i.'age of Cowboy, Kan, owns a horse J.: be secda to a store three miles dis- ior provisions. A note tied to the t: nana has a list of the articles want- Taey are sujpped in a bag to his Tae animal uever stops to nibble â- , ht goes the whole distance at a brisk .:;Eg Parisian who lately came sud- j tj ius tijJ by the knife of a comrade I alii to be curiously tattooed. Be- j r.;i hiiasr. a. serpent raised his head in j :::reo!i,ii of the heart, and all ground j r.-jnbcii "I have been deceived in pa*t the present torments me; the v.i irighttUb me," The death wound; ;: tte worii^, "I ha^e bjen decsived in tie r-. tive fpiritualistic or£;an8 in a::c, four in tlgium, two in Holland, â- .in Spain two in Italy, and three in r.any. In aildition to several journals f:;ea to the cause in P^agland and the ::ed States, it has one organ each in i'.i.i. Kassia, Mexico, the Antille«, Chili, I, I ruguay, the Argentine Republic, inaiia, India, and Cape Cj'ony. a: Brjssela lately an elderly porter, who an excellent cnaracttr, was sent by his ;.:y(! to take some money to the bank. ;iil not return, and his wife found his vat the Mf igue. He had been found '.( of cerel ictl appoplexy in the atreet. ijjrmiiLd that he had been robbed of :ioney, and had wandered Erobni in 1" mental ageuy, afraid to go home. 1 inti; eating ceremony took place at .aingham. Kugland, recently, on the oc- i.ncithe "home coming"of a man named aftti twenty »year4' penal servitude fiie murder. Thousands of people, it is «i, met Hall at the railway station and '.iin 8h enthusiastic reception, greet- jim with loud cheers until he was -ctf in a cab with his relatives. These -io; sympathy and esteem must have -:Tb;: surprised Hall. Wife murder ij twenty years ago, looked upon as a •r serious otTence, even when, as m the *JI Hall, it was committed under cir- -â- -nces of extreme provocation. â-  peer's dauijhter, who is the wife of a '".taant L jlonel, and has lived with her â- =ind for aeven years in India, and ac- â- pinied Kim to the Mediterranean, in a ' tj the L.ndcu Standard, declares 'â-  |the moral tone of English ladies (es- "yof those whom one is forced to as- •â- '•• «'ith in niilitary life and at military J.iaval station!-) la decidedly low. Most â- ctm, from their school days, have wast- •â- â€¢6ir tirr.e pcriiig over dangerous novels -•mmorai hotkii, and their everyday con- •=^'-ion 13 auth as mcst gentlemen in civil "â- ' nld blush to hear." -lingular instance of kleptomania was -jut before the Criminal Court in Paris -aerdiy, An Knglishman and his wife, •wmer af^ed 67 and the latter 63, were â- *(i for stealing some objects cf trifling -•=, at the Magasins du Lcuvre. Tiiey â-  in the neighborhood of Paris, and are f ^?'?° "^^ ^n income amply sufficient ,*^" jneir re(iuirements. Both of them 'â-  "'*t the impulse to appropriate the ^1 articl. 8 was irreti=t ble. They were 1 « }l y examined by physicians, who •*iii " opinion that this statement, ex- iiary as it may appear, was perfectly :.t' " regards bjth husband and wif j, ^ontT"" were in constquence acquit- :ionj S^o^'^d of irresponsibility for tneir Its thTv" °^ P^P^"" recently read be- rtssjjtv^*"" Academy of Medicine ex- etjons i ,°P'°'oi that one in every 5,000 lis show th"**^ alive, while official statis- â- 'sishinJ ^^e mortality among aailrrj :e,tion'^^7^^erage8 one in 4,000, The " iiedivl u ^^^ much disoassed by iemstobT ,y J'^8* mentioned; and it ' '^dicatin" ^^^^ '^^^^ °^ *^« accept- option of tk' ^^^K with the Binsfle ex- â-  "'s bodv "°°^i8tatabl6 decompotition "'elusive Vt.®-*^° regarded as perfectly â- ^ "f sucb f ' cerUin that the possibil- •tidoi manv I' "°^ '^****^ weighs on the f«cent A 1 ^^^ French, as, according •^berof x?^i*'^?tion of the President of ^^«n i- °**rie8, express instructions i*^"et^„f°°? y^illout of every ten to ^*«d do ° ^fo« the lid of the ooffin u Floods and Forests, The fl )od this year exceded in volume in violence and destructiveness that of last year, and caused greater distress. SjarceK- too, had the Ohio begun to subsiie when the news cam« of a frightful cyclone, sweeping through several of the Gali states, and ca-- rymg widespread desolaiion with it. Each, of these calamities carries with it a distinct warning. Bjth were rendered pes- Bible, and even inevitable, by the reckless destruction of forests, which has been goine on for years in the regions visited by flood and, tempest. The samB result, indeed, follows wherever the woods are cut down regardless of their uses to the land and of their protection of the safety and health of man. Floods and cyclones are now common in California where the forests have been wantonly de-' stroyed. Once these dread visitors were al- most unknown on our Picific Slope. "The bed of the beautiful riv^er Ural in Asiatic Russia has become in process of time the channel of frightful torrents, which rush down and wreck the human settlements en Its pictures que banks. The river used to be broad and ciear, and fall of fiah. The d. struction of the forests in the upper valley has caused it to dry up into a email and sluggish stream, no longer navigable, and deprived of its finny habitants. When the deep snows upon the Ural Mountains begin to thaw, there is no longer any barrier to the freshets which come roarlne' down to the rivpr- basin. The floods which, overflowing the banks of the river Danube, carried such havoc and misery to the Hungarian dwellers on its banks a few years ago, must be attributed to the same cause. In many parts of Eu- rope, Asia and America, indeed, regions may be found, once flourishing and fruitful, wnich are now dreary wastes, deserted long since by human beings, as a result ot the cutting down of the forests. In Norway alone, of European countries, is great care taken by the Government to restrict the wholesale destruction of the timber growths where floods of a serious character are unknown. The reason why floods and wind-tempests invariably follow the disappearance of for- ests is a very simple one. Forests hold the moisture which proceeds from heavy rain- falls. They enable that moisture to be gradually distributed, and to filter slowly to the river valleys, instead of rushing into them from mountains and hills. They hold the snow, aid j rotect it from the rays of the SUD, so tba" it takes weeks for it to melt and flow down the slopes. The rivers, when thus protected, are sup- plied with only a moderate and normal amount of water. As soon as the forest dis- appears the rivers and streams inevitably dry up and the floods pour from the high- lands down through the chancels, when the thaws come, unimpeded by the protect- ing trees. it is stated that for some years past there bad been a wanton and reckless cuttiog down of the forests in the region of the Al- lej;hanies, and near the sources of the Ojio River and we can easily trace the recent floods to that unwise policy. Cyclones, too, are necessarily more vio lent and desolating in districts wbere they sweep, uDcheked j the barrier of dense for- est growths, over many miles of open coun- try. They thus acquire a force which, if broken by meeting in their progress the ob- stacle which the woods interpose, would lose much of its violence. A Chinese Wedding Procession. I had not been to the hotel in Hong Kong five minutes before my attention was dis- tracted by a terrific noise. Rushing to the front balcony I was just in time to see quite a remarkable wedding procession. At first from the noise and general style of the afFair, 1 thought it was a f aneral, but I soon dis- covered the difi'erence. A funeral procession is a more cheerful institution than a wed- ding procession, with the possible exception, perhaps, of the hired mourners. Besides this there is the other differences the corpse at a wedding is a live one instead of a dead one. I think if I had my choice I would rather be the dead than the live cornse. The inferiority of the female sex is one of the fundamental principles to which the Chi- nese hold. Even Confucius does not seem to have hai a very broad and elevated sen- timent in this regard, for he is quoted as haviDg said â€" "O; all people women are the most diffijut to manage. If you are familiar with them they become forward, and if you keep them at a distance they become dis- contented." Many women are in the habit of praying that they might be bom men in the next world. Bat this wedding procession, ^irstcame a dozen musicians who were. beating gongs and [blowing fish-horns, each apparently without any reference to the rest. They followed a company of men and boys bear- ing flags and lanterns, after which came a series pf gilded tables with elaborately carvea and pointed canopies over them, and all sorts of eatables upon them. The dis- play of fruit was quite tempting, and I long- ed for a slice of the roast pig and the roast sheep. Bat there were also native dishes, which, by experiment, I found to be far from appetizing. Thus far everythmg was arranged just as the funeral procession would be, and was composed of the same features. _^ But now there was a slight departure from the funeral order of things. There came a magnificent sedan chair, the windows of which were thoroughly curtained, but which I was told contained the happy bnde. ThU gorgeous sedan chair was foUowed by others, also by gaUy decerated jinnkishM. in which were seated the relatives of both the contracting parties. More so-caUed musicians foIlow.Ki, and the pr?*^^^ wound up with a load of boxes, which I in- ferred contained the marriage offerings, and, perhap the trousse au of the bride. A Terre Haute, Ind., man employs his divorced wife as a servant fgirl, and the Sbors say that she has a better ward- robe than when she was his wife. In a fit of rage Adelbert Clark, of Elbji, JT Y.. beat his wife crueUy. The n««h. for. who were attracted byjhenw- took Clark into the woods. ^^"^J^„f' ud feathered hUn, and sent aim home. PEARLS OP TRUTH. Order is heaven's first law. Silence never yet belriyed any one. A good smile is the sunshine of wisdom. Patience is bitter, but its fruit is sweet. A quiet conscience makes one so serene. C^nssience is man's most faithful friend. ^_The worst men often give the best ad- TuhT ^°'^^ °^ *^*"" " ^^ ^•'°" P*"*°° A man may smile, and smUe, and be a VlllilD. hii^erf"' a hereto him that abandons Charity comes too late that comes for the asking. Bjoks, like friends, should be few and wtU chosen. To rule one's anger is well to prevent it IS better. To know how to wait is the great secret of success. than two hours after Don't %at in less bathing. Charms ^slr.ke the sight, but merit wins the soul, A man as he manages himself may die old at inirty or young at eighty. outh is a continual intoxication, for the fever of naton. If you intend to do a mean thing, wait till to-morrow. If you intend to do a noble thing, do it now. The superiority of some men is merely local. They are great because their associ- ates are little. Let us enjoy the fugitive hour. Man has no harbor, time has no shore it rusnes on aad carries us with it. Some old men like to give good precepts to console themselves tor their inability no longer to give bid examples. Reason can not show itself more reason- able than to cease reascuing on things that are above reasoning. As the light goes out with the exhaustion of the oil. so fortune fails with the cessation of human endeavor. It does not follow that you must do a mean thing to a man who has done a mean thing to you. The old p-overb runs, ' "Because the cur has bitten me, shall I bite the cur?" The most lucrative commerce would be to buy men for what they are worth, and to sell them for what they estinate themselves. Despotism does the contrary, and that is why it always beo"!nes bankrupt. Health is the bed plate on which 'the whole mental machinery may rest and work If this be displaced or cracked, all the me- chanism thit stands on it will be jarred and disturbsd and made ineffective. Good luck is good sense and good courage with industry, inspired by noble impulses, guided by intelligence and fore-thought. Bid luck is laziness, stupidity, cirelessaess, recklessnsss. It is but another name for the penalty for bid management. â-  â-  â€" â-  â-  » The White Elephant. From the published descriptions and illustrations we have now a good idea of what Bamum's so-called white elephant is like. Mr. Tegetmeier, of the Fie'd, has described it as having patches cf colour, caused by the absence of the usual colour cells about the head, ears and forelegs. Properly speaking, the animal is a pied ele- phant, and I have seen several in India marked very like it. Mr. Sanderson, who has great experience in elephant catching, says it is not very uncommon to find such, and denies that there are any white ele- phants in existance. He has caught, I thinii he wrote, about two thousand ele- phants and had only come across two that were entirely of a much lighter colour than usual. One of these gradually grew dark with time, and the other, which had sandy coloured hair, died. Tais may be his ex- perience but Mr. C*rl Bock, author of "Tke Head Huntera of Borneo," has just published his "Temples and Elephants," being a narrative ot explorations in Upper Siam and Lao. He arrived in Bangkok in June 1881, a few days before the arrival there of an albino elephant, a coloured portrait of wnich he gives in his book. The King of Siam has for one of bis titles "Lord of the White Elephant " and the Order of the White Elephant was sent to her Majesty Qaeen Victoria and the Prince of Wales in 1880 by his Majesty. For many years pied animals, such as the one brought here lately, have had to do duty in Bangkok for the real sacred albino, which is very rarely found. Mr. Bock says there is a record of one having been caught in 1658, and another two years later. His descrip- tion of the arrival of the rare animal is as follows ;â€" • Then came the hero of the day, the white elophant himself, in company with three others, all so called white ele- phants, in comparison with which he cer- tainly deserved the proud title. Were I to describe him as tehUe, I should lay myself open to the charge of colour blindness, but he was quite an albino, the whole body beiuR of a pale reddish-brown colour, with a few real white hairs on the back. The iris of the eyes, the color of which is held to be a good test of an albino, was a pale Naples yellow." Jl is strange that the Siamese, who regard the white elephant as sacred, have not long ago established a race of them for although the elephant will not readily breed in cap- tivity, by enclosing a large tract of suitable country and turning into it such as were heavily marked with large patches, a sure sign that they were inclining towards albin- ism, the desired result would be attained in time. â€" The delays of good and dutiful intentions, which ultimately lead to the defeat of them, cause more regret and repentance in men's lives than any other clan of causes. • A Fibst-Class Akticle. This is, and must continue to be, the ecxlsmation of every one who has used Putnam's PAiNLEaB OoEW Ex- THAoroB, for it Is, without exception, the only remedy In the market that wIU remove corns vrlthout pain. All we ask for the Com Kxtrac- tor is a fir trial, for it will give to you wh^ it has already given to thousands of others snfler- iMfr^^ros, unbounded satisfaction. Put- iSSn's Painless Com Extractor i" J»ld evenr ^^here. Beware of cheap counterfeits. Poison St Co Kingston, proprs, A deep true low wi 11 lift a aoul out of^the B hadows of selfishaeas and the innd of fleeh- llQeas when idl other powers eombined have failed to extrioate it from the slongh. The weatheriirophetlooksforBiiriinthJsnKmth. The wise man looks for a blood purifiei- that will do' injure hiB system he can find what be wants in Dr. Carson's Stomach Bitten, the greatest of all blood -purifiers. In Urge botUes at 60 oents. In "Ladies' Journal" Competition No. 5, Closing April Slst. The proprietor of the Ladies' Journal o'Jors another long list of rewards, by far the incst valuable yet given. This is likely to be the closing competition of the season. THV QTTESTIONS. 1 â€" o^s the word grandmother occur in the liible if to, where. 2 -Is it recorded anywhce In the Bible that a prophet or prophetess had anything to do with a college. 3.â€" Give the name of an Uncle of Aaron, The valuable and costly articles given below will be cheerfully handed over to â- ' he first tw» hrundred and twetity-one per- •ons who send correct answers to the ibove Bible questions, just as quickly af- er the closing day, April 21st, as possible. THS REWARDS. 1 Ore G: and Square Rosewood Piano, $.')00 00 2. Urie Pine Cabinft Oigan, value .... 225 00 i Uae Beaut fulfil ver I 61 Service ... 11000 I. f me G^nt)emsn'3 So'id Gold Huntinic Casp Stt m-windiPR and Stem-setting Genuine Elgin Watch, Box Case, latest style, t-legantly t ngra ved 100 00 '). One Lady's Solid G'ld Humine Case Waich, Genuine Waltnam 7. 90 00 6 Six Kegant Black Silk DresRea, t- pitte nsfrom Petley's Great Silk 1 Houf e, Toronto, §30 each ISO. 00 12 Five Beautiful Triple Silver Plat- 11 â-  id Ice Pitchers, valued at 830 10 each 150C0 17 Five I^adies' Elegant Coin Silver lo Hnnting Case Watches, valued at â- 11) $)9 eacn 9500 '2 1 Five Gentlemen's Heavy Coin Sil- ti ver Hunting Case Watches, val- 2i ued at 318 each 90 00 J7 bix Elegant New Spring Print .1 Dc'ses, patterns from Petleys" V2 Toroato, $5 each 30 00 •3 Five So'id Aluminum Gold Hnnt- •i jng Case Watches, valued at fl7 37 each 8500 Five Hunting Casn Solid Nickel 'j^,' Silver Watches, ?16 each 80 00 H Fi ve Open Face Solid Nickel Heavy lo Bevelled Crystal Watches, $15 17 each 75 00 ' Seven Renowned Waterbury "i Watches, «5 each 3500 55 Twelve Sets, fhalf dozen each), lo Triple Silver Plated Tea Spoons, m) Sleach 48 CO -.7 Thirty-nine Beautifully Bound to V Volumes of Shakespeare's Com- 105) plete Works, $2.50 each 97 50 105 1 Fifty-six Volumes. Beautifully to Bound, Tennyson's Poems, J2.25 !63J each 12600 161 Sixty-one Elegant Triple Silver lo Plated, on Solid Steel, Butter â- lil) Knives. |1 each 6100 Every competitor must send fifty cents in Post-office order, scrip or small coin, (no postage stamps), for which the La- dies' Journal will be sent tor one year to any desired address. Post-ofBce orders are procurable at any post-office, and are an absolutely safe way of remitting. Let- ters should be registered unless remit- tance is made by post-office order. Since the above was written, we notice that in addition to the costly rewards of- fered above, the sender of the middle cor- rect ansicer of the whole competition from first to last, and the twenty persons next followinq who send correct answers â€" will receive the following rewards, respect- ively â€" fj MIDDI.B BSWABDS. 1. One Wanzer Sewing Machme, $60 ... iCOOO 1 Six Hunting Case SoUd Mckel C'r Watches, valued $15 each 9000 8 Kight Open Face Extra Heavy Crys- to^ tal SoUd Nickel Watches, $12 15) each 9600 lG)six Well-Bound Volumes of Tenny- i" son's Poems, $2.25 ISSO Then even the last ones are to be re- membered in a long list of consolation re- wards. These rewards will be given to {lie last seventy-seven persons who send cor- rect answers to the Bible questions given above. THK CONSOLTION RKWABOS. 1. To the last correct answer received. One Elegant Silver Tea Service of six pieces, latest design $100 00 2. One Gentleman's Beautiful Solid Gold Hunting Case (Jenuine Wal- tham Movement, cases finely en- graved 9700 3. One Ladys Solid Ocdd Hunting Case Watch, Genuine American 80 00 4 "1 Seven Fine SoUd Coin Silver Htmt- to ing Case Watches, value $20 loJ each 14000 1^ 1 Six Hunting Case Solid Nickel J° J Silver Watches, $15 each 00 00 17 "1 Eight Solid Aluminum Gold Htmt- to ing Case Watches, value $14 2lj each 112C0 25 1 Six Open Face Sol id Nickel n Watches, Heavy Crystal, value 30J $12eaoh 7200 31 1 Twenty-five Klemnt Triple Silver to Plated Pickle Folks, value $1,10 55j each 27 50 56 "i Twenty-two Solid Triple Silver- ro V Plated Butter Knives, value $1 77 J each .- 2200 Each competitor must, in every case, «end fifty cents for one year's subscrip- tion to the Ladies' Journal with their an- swers. It may be of some advantage to you if you mention where you first saw this notice. The letters must aU he post-mark- ed where mailed not latter than April 21st, the closing day of this competition. The correct address is Editor Ladiet' Journal, Toronto, Canada. The names and post- omce addresses (and street and number, when in the city), of those who ara n*- vessiui iB ebtainmg these nwardi, w3 b« given in the May number of the Journal. Our readers may be assured that all the rewards, as given above, •will be promptly and cheerfufiy handed oyer to the suooess- ful ones, as soon as possible after the clese of the competition. We know the publisher of the Ladin' Jowmaly and we are certain he will do as stated above, or we would not give all this spaoe to this long descriptiion of this plan. The La- dies' Journal is a 20 page Monthly Fash- ion and Domestio M^agine.j^Two full pages of newest music are given in each issue; large illastrations of the latest things in fiudiion droles one or two ser^ al stories and a short story; domestio and household hints besides a large quantity of miseellaneous reading, particubxly to intereet ladies.^In short, it is the cheap- est publication, and the best for the money we know of. So if you don't suc- ceed m obtaining a reward, you cannot fail to be pleased with your fifty cent in- vestment. iioa'c lorget that the regular annual subscrip- tion to the Ladies' Journal is lif'y cents. So you pay nothing additional for the privilege of competing for ihefce costly rewards. Dyspepsia and Dr Carson's Stomach Bitters can't live m the sane Stomach, one of them has got to go, and it lan t the Stomach Bitters. The people's own favorite family medicine, in large bottles at 50 cents. PARIS6BEEN. GUAEANTEED PURE. Price Low For Future Delivery, Copland McLaren, MONTREAL. Tliat Large anl Nicely Finisliell store in the Central Block, Waterloo, to rentâ€" rent reasonable, immediate possession. WlLLlAil SinDER t Co. Watarloo. SHORTHAND. The accomplishment of the age. A railroad means of communicating thought â€" A railroad i v reason of its ex- peditionâ€"A lailroad Dy reason of its ense. Complete set of books for self instruction for beginners, iwst free for 4Sc. Send for price list to T. A. MclNTYRE and Co., Ontario Shorthand Emporium 34 K ing St. East., Toronto. TOSADDEERST The celebrated Elm City Harness Oil can be had from the following Wholesale Saddlery Hardware houses Field and Davidson, Hamilton; Morgan Bros, Hamilton; Eraser and Johnson, Hamilton C. Davidson and Co.. Toronto; 8. Trees and Co., Toronto; T. Woodhouse and Co., Toronto; W. Ellis, London; W. C. Martin, Kingston: J. Smith aad Son, Brantford; or from F. F. DALLE Y and Co. Hamilton. Sole agents for the I)ominion. 3S"xssczn Common Sense' Brace r pants, PAKTS No strain on shoulders or H requiresno BUTTONS ON Simple, easy, cheap, durable. Bent to any address by nail on receipt of »â-  50 or 75c. with " little Dorcas" 4â€" H.N.FI8KEaiid Co. ,277 King Street West, Toronto. Pulmonary Institute ^^S^Si Established for the cure of ccnsumption, Bronchitis, Citatrh of Nose, Throat and Lungs, Dyspepsia and Liver Complaint, Cincer, Scrofula, Diseases of Skin. Diseases of Eye, Ear, and H'^art. Cancers and Tu- rners dissolved by Electricity without the knife. Gjtlvanism and Faradism, in all their various forms scientifically applied to the treatment of Diseases of Women, uprvous exharstion, nervous debility and kindred diseases. Telephone ^communication with all parts of Oatario. C tn be consulted by telephone when desirable. Send for our medical treatise and list of questions. A'ldrpss S EDW McCULLY, M.D., M.C.P.S.O., M.C P.S Q., Proprietor. M. HILTON WILLIAMS, MCP.S.O., AU correspondence must be addressed to Dk. McCully 274, 276 278 Jams, cor. Gerrard, TORONTO. Mention this paper. GnRHEYS WARE, STAMP SCALES. THE BEST, THE STRONGEST, THE MOST RELIABLE L'nrivaijp.l in matpriai, construction and finish, per- fect in iicsuriicy iiml \ineiiuullcil in durability. Guar- anteed to givfc entire; satisfaction. THEY EXCEL ALL OTHERS- RAILROAD. WAREBOUSK AND BOLL Mills' Alarm Money Drawers. ':fnd for illustp.*tfd fpice li«t. GURNETS ^WARE, HAMILTON, OKT is the only HAS UFOKTXD 90 PER CENT OF ALL HORSES Erer Imported Prom Prane« to Aniorieo, Wboae Parity of B1m4 la crtabltehed by their Beeorded, Peeler ec« in the Peivhe- rou Stad B*ok of France, which Dnft Horse Record ot that conn try. Hr Jnnhamhas1ast pnMlshed a 25,000 edition of his hand- somely illustrated 140 page eatalognf for 1884. contalnlner descriptloDs and ped- terees (many for 10 venerations) of STlIUMSAIAtES Wawaakud. ""1 Stalllam ^uratMf Bi«e4era. OataloKoeftee. Addrne. M. W. DCNHA M, Warne. ta Fan Oo., niinoU. (39 miles weit of Clilca«o, m C A Jl«*We B v* _»^ ^^^__^ fir, 11:':., â- " a ill h f '1 I Ml ?â- --! I

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