Grey Highlands Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 29 May 1884, p. 7

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 AGBIOIMURAL. poiltry Mannre. I VQ«)k«r, the agricnltnral chemist fCal AKricaltnral Society of Eng. ' "in rslatJoQ to ponltry m»Dure :â€" fj to the applicatioa of poultry ^t*he least expensive and best way of rVistomix it with dry earth, aahea h like into a compcs .«. Mixed with '"' the quantity of dry earthly I I tbis kino, it will 8}on be reduced f irly "^^'y ^^^ powdery state, m ' may be readily sowa broadcast or I he drill, and found very ustfal in every kind of garden vegetabloa. ^K crops, such as turnips, carrots, "1^ *c It should be mixed, after re- "j powdery state, -with an equal ' snperphosphate, and the mixture at the rate of 500 pounds to the making it into compost with earth, •adament, qaicklime should never be â-  for its effect would be to lib- jin the most of which would jwi't ^•' fihe amtBODia, and be lost. On the other hand, there lonly DO iiarm, but a pcsitivo advant- I jjjjjing it with soot. In the absence I the nest best thing ie to mix it with ilaster, lo which a small quantity of LLnha'te is addedâ€" the free acid of ^iil effectually prevent the escape of nonia. A mixture of two part* burnt rand one part superphosphate may be readiness to mix with the fresh jduD^forthe purpose of absorbmg j of moisture, and thus facilitate its reduced to a dry and friable nature. Wh of fresh chicken manure and one rfthe preceding mixture of burnt Land saperphosphates, if kept under l.jf a few days and turned once or Idaring the time, and then passed I55 a screen or sieve, will be found to K;triic»tious when applied at the rate lix to eight hundred pounds t« the i«BICULTlRAL ITEAS. lecent autopsy upon a valuable horse at Iport, Ct., rtvealed taat death had Ln caused by pieces of zinc which he Lired from the lining of his manger illowed. Kiespondent of the Western Agricul- I, ays a teaspoonful of saltpetre dis- liiai gallcn of water and the solution i to the grape vines, will check the U ot the rase bug. This remedy might |i:h tryinc;. 13 made in foreign papers of a lery where each horse gets an allowance }:termilk daily throughout the year. Ititem has been continued about twelve and 'found to answer in a most kctcr)' manner." lorrespDndent of the Prairie Farmer bt in cutting up some dead and de- spple trees he dislodged scores of wnich had found lodgment in the aand roots, and is now convinced that hiies ought not to be left in the orchard Viss breeding places for insects, but I'M immediately consigned to ths fire, [tD^'lish Gevernment is seriously con- bth; cultivation of forests in Ireland. Vmtz o( Copenhagen, one of the high- asrities en the subject, has visited 1, and studied its adaptability to cnltivation, and pronounces it one of favorable countries in the world ^jrowth 0! timber. tosor E, M. Shelton, Farm Manager |( Kiriis Agricultural College, has three or four distinct breeds of lisi studied them carefully during jfirs. Wtien asked which is best he â- tfcat he would be " sorely puz7.1ed to |Eich his ateiling point) and counter- as^faknesses, d'.ry fancier, who believes in the t:: ensilage for fowls during the winter, !!â-  hes not pay to construct silos to :;: in. He uses old but tight casks, ^a.tela, or molasses hogsheads. To pir cont jnt at the proper tempera- pinks thcrn under ground. He finds prt clover, rye, and tender grass, like piroa a lawu, make the best ensilage â- papers liave recommended testirg 'ii'I li'ilil feeds by placing them be- Mjer3 cf (lamp cotton, and putting |-iiucny place in a room. This is â- 'â- y severe test. Seedi not entirely Js n vitality would germinate under fifOrabk circumstances. They might Ift^t, however, if they w«re placed in "tere they are ordinarily planted, f I' possible that they would not pro- fit's that would stand ordinary ex- ""they did. 'Joodman, Secretary of the Miatoari jsorticaltural Society, thijks many "*6sipjared by cold weather maybe RactiDg on the rule th»t the more FIB injured the more it should be cut \m snould be done before the growth rjiipring. His argument in favor of F" of treatment is, that a peach tree T-e enonjh left at the root to start the I'Mt-fe will recover, provided it has V^n distance tx) send the sap through ^6d wood. On the other hand, if f ud to flow to the tops of the trees r circulate so slowly as to soon be ^â- Tiirjingnp. ™«a have been jjrown for swine J'ws at the Michigan agricultural I he method of management has L^i^e a small patch of artichokes J?' to the swine-pens, upon which ^H Bowa were turned in the spring, «i to harvest the roots for them- iu '^^."opia thus grown with very V^' "Dee it requires no harvesting, it jr^"f^iiing in the ground all winter, â-ºktn^ â-  '"'^culent lood for the sows Oh' '•' "^^ needed, and most diffi- ° "i from other sources. Prof. J L^^ '^11 superintendent, is so well ie is resnlt of this management " enlarging the artichoke pl*nta- ^^ The Care of Skeep. ""'tad*' '^?*bandry means the 1 »-j r -râ€"^auury mean* lai Out • '"""^ion* feeding and N â- teat care, hthijij" "«ry part of the syatera. '*1)1. n ' ^° '" from sheep being ,(^ "pon our higher priced lands, l.t, .U any Othr nnimi1 tii» an any other animal pays [•"EnBio J ' "tuT animal p»yi hnffi J ' " l^»««o »id t*»ti KC^ff^k Dairy .»ock, ' On much more in the â- heep for milk •lone than diaep ia all »av. h--Mâ€" *.!.•_ « much to bS5 iiifi^^JS^J^ bodiM. The warta of pho^^JTil but yet the beat mutton brinra a hiLZi price than beef. Oar Urge ciS*^^ ^fi^ facturing towns are constantly inc-««?«^ their demands for good maS/and^hrde? mand is likely to increase as fa^t a« thi nrn duction. If we should feed as l" gra numC of sheep per hundred acres in the Middle and Eastern States a. does Great Britain the desire for emigration from these Statei to more fertile lands of the West would soon cease. • How the Old Prmter Passad Away. And 80, year after year, he wroueht among the boys on a morning p»p«r He went to bed about the time the rest of the world got up, and he arose about the time the rest of the world saC down to dinner He worked b every kind of light except sunlight. There were candles In the office when he came m then they had lard oil lamps that smoked and spluttered and smelled then he saw two or three printers bUnded by explosions of camphene and spirit gas, then keroeene caaie in and heated up the newsroom on snmmer nights like a furnace then the office put in gas. and now the electric light swung from the ceiling and dazzled his old eyes, and glared into them from his copy. If he sang on hie way home a policeman bade him '"cheese that," and reminded him that he was distnrbi ig the peace and people wanted to sleep. Bat when he wanted to sleep the rest of the world, for whom he had sat up all night to make a morning paper, roared and crashed by down the noisy streets under his window, with cart and truck and omnibus blared with brass bands, howled with hand-organs, talk- ed and shouted and even the shrieking newsboys, with a ghastly sarcasm, murdered the sleep of the tired old printer by yelling the name of his own paper. Year after year the foreman roared at him to remember that this wasn't an afternoon paper editors shrieked down the tube to nave a blind man put on that dead man's case smart young proof-readers scribbled sarcastic comments on his work on the mar- gin of his proof slips they didn't know how to read lont;-winded correspondents learn- ing to write, and long-haired poets who could never learn to spell, wrathfuUy cast all their imperfections upon hia head. But through it all he wrought patiently, and found more sunshine than shadow in the world he had more friends than enemies. Printers and foremen and prestmen and re- porters came and went, but he stayed, and be saw newsroom and sanctum filled and emptied and filled and emptied again and filled again with new strange faces. He be- lieved in his craft, and to the end he had a silent pity, that came as near being contempt as his good, forgiving old heart could feel, for an editor who had cot worked his way from a regular devilship up past the cases and the imposing stone. He worked all that night, and when the hours that are so short ia the ball-room and so long in the composing-room drew wearily on, he was tired. Ha hadn't thrown in a very full cose, he said, and he had to climb clear into the boxes and chase a typs into a corner before he could get hold of it. One of the boys, tired as himself â€" but a printer is never tco tired to be good-natured â€" offer- ed to change places with him, but the old man said there w»s enough m the case to last bim through this take, and he wouldn't work any more to-nij ht. The type clicked in the silent room, an by and by the old man said "I'm out of sorts.' And he sat down on the low window sill by his case, with bis stick in his hand, his hands folded wearily in his lap. The types clicked on, A galley of telegraph waited. " What gentleman is lingtnng with D 13 " called the foreman, who was always dangerously polished and polite when he was on the point of exploding with wrath and impatience. Slug Nine, to spaak to quietly, The telegraph boy came running in with the last manifold sheet, shouting "Thirty I" They carried the old man to the foreman s long table and laid him down reverently and covered his face. They took the stick out of his nerveless hand, and read his last Boston, November 23.â€" The American bark Pilgrim went to pieces off Marblehead in a light gale about midnis;ht. She was old and unseaworthy, and this was to have been her last trip.â€" -Bawkeye. THE TEUUBLB KIWUT. passing by the alley, stopped the old man sitting there so Australia as a Borrower. The Australian Colonies have to pay Eng- land at least $60,000,000 a year, interest on borrowed money. The Governments have borrowed about $550,000,000, mortgage companies $125,000,000 and the Economtat estimates the British deposits m Australian banks at nearly $60,000,000. There was a balance against these colonies on the trade with England of $35,000,000, last two ywirs, during which the total balance due to Eng- land, under every head, was about $100,- 000 000. Bat the amount raised m Jioglana on Australian account, last year, was more than this, perhaps $10,000,000 more. What might have been expected to happen, did happen. England having more to sbnd to Aiutralia than to receive therefrom, ship- tTsomething like $1,600,000 m gold. The ^serves of the Australian b.«k. reoently •auk low. those of Victoru. and New Song being 2 8i in the pound and the banks havTbeen trjinginvainto ^°'«*^,f~^ Australia will have to slacken her swift rate of borrowing in futu re. «• I think crime is on the increase " cb- Ji^d tkrt be .» bop. U be pm([»jb.r. makes a splendid Spring MeOKune. *»»a oentfl- Mr. Taylor, who oaUed Mr. Cjmmwf • liarat the Windsor Hotel !«* wed., the New v«,w«lLr.«r««T "had been diiuDg:. After JSir^k Si iT' -diDed" he i. apt to be rery f ereriah. _-cf a la RoMia. iS?L^lLi J?H°? **»• Magirtrate he made ?ttS,^-^^l'l^8^"»- -A determined him J^\r*t ""**** ^y *•»• •ol«^i«s to mob buTit wi! ^* "'« m.king thU confession but It WM repressed. He was reserved for saTd«^T',*"'J*'^P""'»^»» i^tS. tf^qq 1 v^ H' ^^'^^ He WW sentenced to 399 lashes with thb knout, vhich meant sL.ti^'""'**^ *? '^^' n'^l^s.he possessed superhuman endurance. Hs was marched oat to punUhmenk in w.mp»ny with two forgers, all Si. Peters- burg tnmmg ont to witness the spectacle. Xhis horrible show is thus graphically de- scribed by the old chonicle; " " mI"I^V^^% prepared for him was a strong block of wood fixed in the ground with thr4 grooves at the top and two rings near the bottom the middle groove was for the neck, and the two others lot the armpits, the ring, below to lock around the ankles about the u ' J^®" ^^^" ^°"' skins, especially where the knout-master trod, upon which lay hm whips, marking irons, pincers, etc. An officer then read a p»rer to the people, signifving that fo-gery upon the Imperial bank being a capital crime, and two of the prisoners convicted of it weree condemned to receive eleven blows with the knout, tj have their nostrils palled out, and be ban- isied for life to Siberia the murderer of so many persons to rtce've 399 blows, to be branded three times in the face, have his nostrils pulled out, and (if then alive) be bauuhedfor life to the mines of Siberia. "The executioaer and his assistants then stripped him, tied his bands across, and led hun to the post. After fixint; hit ankles they bent bis neck and arms over it, and drew the rope with which bis hands were tied throngh the rinj? on the opposite side, which seemed to stretch all the muscles of the bsck. He then retired about four of five yards from him, and, taking up one of the knouts, worked it with his hands to give it a proper elasticity. Walking towards the prisoner with four or five steady steps, then taking a spring he struck a perpendicular stroke with a heavy, loud crack. The first stroke cut from the right side ot the bottom of the neck to the left armpit. The effect wa* vis- ible in a moment, and by the violence cf his screams afforded reason to suppose that the pain was very great. The second was aljout half an inch below the first, and so on till twenty-five, when, changing the whip, the operater erased the former wound, striking from the left side to the right, and after- ward quite perpendicular. Tne strokes were given with the great j" t regularity. B-.t veen each » person migit deliberAt -ly ooutit eight tie executioner always walking slowly to and from tne stkke. " His cries were now so terrible that some of the spectators were obliged to turn their b«cks and put- their fingers in their ears. All wn qaiet »nd silent, and the crack of the knouc was beard a great distance. After receiving three hundred lashes the culprit's voice grew faint, and during the last one hundred he showed no signs of life whatever, the whole of the upper part of the back beicg beaten to a black mummy. After the last blow the asststants lifted up ths face by the hair, and the executioner struck him forci- bly three times with an instrument that left the initial of murderer, throwing each time a handful of black dust into the wound after which, at two pulls, he tore the gristle of his note, and loosened him from the block. The whole lasted about three-quarters of an hour and it was generally thought that he had been dead some time; however, he made a feeble attempt to put on his coat, and re- covered suffioiently to be able to make some reparation to society by working in the iron mmes." » â-  m^m I â-  There are lots of people going around grumbling, and half sick at the Stomach all the time who might be weli and happy, if they only used Br. Carson's Stomach Bitters oocasionaUy. It ia a splendid Blood Purifier All Druggists 50 cents. Faith wifiout works is good for n;thing when it comes t j a clock. Failure Impossible When Poison's Nebviline is used for pain. It matters not of how long standing it may be, or how often other remedies have failed to afford relief, Nerviline, the ttreat pain cure, does its work promptly. Bay a 10 cent sample bottle, and try it for internal or external pains. You will be convinced of its extraordinary power in relieving pain. Ten cent bottles at all dealers in medicine. Large bottles 25 cents, at all druggists. A single female lobster has from 20,000 to 30.000 eggi â€" as nearly as possible the same as the female salmon. The success with which the Triangle Dyes have met proves then* the most remarkable Dyes of the pist or present. They are at- tracting attention from all classes of society, lOo. I (Louisiana has school accommodations for but 75,000 children, though there are at le*st 250,000 little ones in tne State. No Disappointment. Disappointments of one kind or aaother crop up all along life's pathway, for unfor- tunately it is the unexpeoted that always happens. There is at least one article of acknowledged merit that never disappoints. Putnam's Painlena Com Extractor is sure to remove the worst corns is a few days, and as no claim is made that it will cure anything els 3, it cannot disappoint. If you have hard or soft corns just try it. Bawara of the artic'.e "just as good." N. C, Poison Co., proprietors, Kingston. *^ *^ A.P 179 LOTS FOR SALEâ€" 28 AND 29, Ist. CON- CESSION South West erf Toronto and Sydenham Road, HoUand; mill site thereon. For particulare apply Boi 136, Newmar ket. F~ LOUR AND SAW MILLS FOR SALE St Lakeside, county Oxford; brick building « 5 50 j 31 storeys hi»h. containinf three pair mill stones "^a »" £«a«B»fv machinerr f orflouring and custom work saw ^35^?S^blebf cutting 50 to 10,000 fe.t per day; S^^ven'b^^ew OO-horse-power B"9k«y« »i"°"*»" rot-rff engini 3J acres land. hpiBe. stable drtj^tom, ^oSd fralt orchSd; sheds and stabling for farmers Vwioe .000 terms, »5,000c.sh. balance on mort- gage. Q i DAUtYMPLK, Uteside. WHAT SHALL I DKiNJi I TBK HOMTSXBBAT Lime Fruit Juice. 'g^^^SSSwaTlSSSnAS. H. MiaEOK 00, MPRovEl) Washing MACHDisr -â- - patented. apvroMhas BMier the old matkod of hard iubbing Oum any derioe yat introdneed to the poblio. BasilT vpfted. and wubea perfeoUy otean, without breakinc bottons. or inJniy to the clothe*. DeseriptiTe eirealan maOed free. niM.«L J. H. OONITOS. Van- Meek Hill. Oot W. F. P. Gurrie Co. 100 Qrer ITun Street, Montreal. ImportMaof Drain Pipes, Psrtlsnd Caneni, attmnrnj Tops, Oanada Cement, Vent Lining*, Water Lime, Fin* Covore, Whiting, Fire Bricks, Plaster of Paris, Fire Clay, Borax, Boman Cement, China Clay, llannfacturers of Bessemer Steel atttm. Cnmr Bed Sprlncs FiVK Cents and get a sample copy of Tbuth, the best ^â-  (age Weekly Magazine publish- ed. Bee the big list ot booki iven Free to each yearly sub- crib er and clubber. S.FRANK WILSON, 33 A 35 Adelaide Bt, We8t.;Toronto, Oanads. TO SADDLERS. The celebrated Elm City Harness Oil can be had from the following Wholesale Saddlery Hardware houses Field and Daridsoo, Hamilton; Morgan Bros, Hamil ton; Fraser and Johnson, Hamilton C. Davidson and Co. Toronto; 8. Trees and Co., Toronto; T. Woodhouee and Co., Toronto; W. Ellis, London; W. 0. Martin, KinssU^n: J. Smith and Son, Brantford; or rom F. F. DALLEY and Co., Hamilton. Sole agents or the Dominien. F. Ee DIXON CO. Hsnarsetarers of Star Rivet Leather Belting 70 lUng Street, East, Toronto. Large double Drlvln Belts a specialty, bend or Price Lists and Discounts. Mntiial Marriage Endowment As'ii, INCOKPORATKD. HEAD OFFICE. LONDON. ONT. Issues Certificates from $125 to $3,000, payable on mar- riase at following rates. For $900. or half Certificate, $4 quarterly dues in ad- vance 0.75. For $1,U00 Certificate, $6 quarterly dues In advance $1.00. For $2,000 Certificate, $10 quarterly dues in advance $2.00. For $3,000 Certificate, $15 quarterly dues in advance $3.00. A percntuce ot the Fees applied towards a re serve Fund. The only cash payments required at the time of making application for a certificate. The re- mainder of the liability is made up of assessments at the rate of $1.60 on each $1,000 upon the marriage of mem- bers, 12 assessments made the first year payable quar- terly, which upon the present large membership secures the payment of a number of Endowments, and a safe and reliable investment for young people. Bend for By- Laws, and full particulars to W. J. IMLACH. Secretary, London, Ont. PABIS GREEN eUlBAHTEED FUSE. Price Low For Futnre Delivery. Copland McLaren, MONTREAL. REINHARDT'S HAIR RESTORER and Moustache Prodooer. A genuine prepara- tion which is guaraanteed to do all that is claimed for it. Producing luxuriant whiskers and moustache in s ix weeks. In bottles safely ijacked to any ad dress for $1. F. REINHAKDT, Mail Building, Toronto. DEATH TO POTATO BUGS. ASK rOUR LOCAL DBALKR FOR RAMSAT^ PUKE PARIS GREEN. Nothing has been found more effective for destroying Potato Bugs. The purest is the cheapest. A^» ^EteLTxtssLy Son, Paint and Color Manufacturers, Montreal. Sold STOCK BROKERS (Members of the Toronto Stock Kxchange) Buy and sell on commission for cash or in mar gin all securities dealt in on the Toronto, Mon- treal, sud New Â¥o*k STOCK EXCHANGES, Also execate orders on the CUcago Board r Trade. -IN GRAIN AND PROVISIONS. 6 TOROSTTO STREET, TORONTO THE AMERICAN" Carriage Repository Is now full of all the latest designs in Fine Carriages, Ro»d Waggons, BaRgies, Sulkeys, and Skeleton Waggons. Do not fail to call and see our Village Carts in vnrious styles fitted with our American Canopies. The Greatest Novelty of the Age. We make a specialty of American made Car- riages, and have a larger stock to select from than any House in Canada. J Chas. BrowD Co., 91 American Carriage Repository. 1|1^ 6 ADELAIDE ST., E. Toronto. iHE MODEL^ Washer BLEACHER. Weighs but 6 poonds. Can be carried in a small ralise. ninstration shows Machine in boiler. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. «t.M*.i»0 REVTARD FOR' ITS SITPERIOR. Washing made light and easy. The clothes have that pure whiteness which no other mode of washing can pro- duce. No rubbing required, no bicticm to injure the fabric. A 10 year old girl can do the washing as well as an older person. â- -â- â- â-  ••"â- Â»'=SH .;:^ i « To place it in every household THz PBioz has been KEDUCED to $2.S0, and if not found satisfactory, money refunded. See irtiat the " Oanada Presbyterian" says about it.â€" The Model Washer and Bleacher which Mr. 0. W. Dennis offers to the public has many and valuable advantages. It is a time and labor-saving machine, is Bubatantial and enduring, and is very cheap. From trial in the household we can testify to its excellenpe." De- livered to any express ofSce in the Provinces St Ontario and Quebec. Charges paid $3.00-_Send for circulars. AGENTS WANTED. C. W. DENNiS; TOBONTOIBABe AINIHOUSE. i St3 Vi».V6li «rRSEr tTOROSTO.IOXT. 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 Portland every Thursday during the winter months. QUEBEC TO tlVKRPOOL Slontreal, May. 10. "Vancoaver, Hay. 31. *Harnla, May. 17. Toronto. June. 7. Rrooklyn, May. 84. Oregon, Jane. IL Rates of passage Cabin, Quebec to Liverpool 950, $60, $65. 9§0 return, $90, $108, $117, |114. according to steamer and berth. Interm^iate, $10. Steerage, at lowest rates. The saloons and staterooms in steamers marked thus are amidsliips, where but little motion is felt, and no cattle or sheep are carried on them. For further partioolars apply to any Grand Trunk Railway A^ent or local agents of the Com pany. or to DATIB TORRANCE A CO., General Agents. Montreal. Is a perfect gem, equal to an Imported French Corset; fits like a glove to the figure; very styl- ish, elegant in appearance, and approved ot by the most fastidious. Manufactured only by THE CBOMPTON CORSET CO. 78 YORK STREET. TO RONTO. Agents Wanted FOR THE Citizens Insurance Co., of Canada. Established 1864.â€" Capital, and Assets, 21,126,985. -GoTemment Deposit $122,000 Cash.â€" As the Company transacts Fire, Life, and Accident business, a profltable agency is thus offered to those soliciting insurance risks. Special terms to those who have valnable con- nections. Farm property insured as low as by Farm Muttials. Address, Head Office, 179 St. James Street, Montreal. t^ The stock of this Company is held by many of the wealthiest citizens of Montreal, Allan Line Royal Mau SteamsMps. Sailing during winter from Portland every Thursday, and Halifax every Saturday to Liverpool, and in summer from Quebec every Saturday to Liverpool, calling at Lon- donderry to land mails and passengers for Scotland and Ireland. Also from Baltimore via Halifax and St John's N. F., to Liverpool fortnightly during summer months. The steamers of the Glasgow lines sail during winter between Portland and Glasgow, and Boston and Glasgow alternately; and during summer between Quebec and Glasgow and Boston and Glasgow every week. For freight, passage, or other information apply to A. Schumacher Co., Baltimore; S. Cunard Co., Halifax Shea Co, St John's, N. F. ;Wm. Thomson Co., St. John, N. B. Allan Co, Chicago Leve Alden, New Yoik H. Bourlier, Toronto Allans, Rae Co., Quebec U. A- AUan, Portland, Boston, Mon- treal. MARRIAGE AID ASSOCIATION. $5 00 PAID ON MARRIAGES. Over $100,000 Paid in Benefits to Date. ISSUE IN 1883. OVER $2,000,000. The only Company in Oanada that has paid a claim. UNDOOBTED SECURITY. Premiuma smflll. Address W. B. WEBBER, Agents Wanted. Secretary, Hamilton. 84,000 Sold In 17 Montbs BtTY ONLY THB Walter Woods HAMILTON ONT. 60RMYS WARE, STAIARD SCALES. THE BEST, THE STRONGEST, THE MOST RELIABLE. Unrivallecl in .material, CDnatmctlon and flnluli, per- fect in accxiracy and unequalled in durability. Guar- anteed to give entire satisfaction. THEY EXCEL ALL OTHERS. RAXXAOAO, WAREHOnSX AltD lOUb Mills' Alarm Money Drawers; ^^ SEND FOB ILIUSTEAIBD FBICE U8XL GUENE YS WABB, ERn)EN ;bmtanota qo. ;) UANUFAC^CmBBS OF (: gintf^t (Huittn ^taU m Mvtt f tote, 9eir lofk, Kerid» (Ct.), Oleago, SaaFnnoisoo, LondMi, (Eng.). Bfi^CH FACtOBiFâ€" Cor. Cannoii and Wellim«n Streefs, Hamilteii, Out. ' Many imobaTCrB haring tbrao^ • rifuilaritr ot namss pwdiMed otbes wares under the imtaoMidn that Bt« ware ot oar maonfietara, we •Mcampelf- ed to ask spedal attentiao to the sdoto TBASB KABK8, Tbs fast that our name and Trade Madm arebeincsoeloe^ ly imitatttil ihoold be • snlBeiein gamta- tee to the. pobijc that our wsm ate tha BEST UTTHS WOKLD. TBADB 1847 Sogers Bros. Al. UATtn: 1 â- Â»â- â€¢ t â- â€¢â- * • 1 e.t J I 'J 111 i I

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