Ontario Reformer, 22 Sep 1871, p. 4

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

eat i molt aC EE _~; =.' lightning. - from the woods, or rotten wood, "sods, or, where it can becheaply obtained, | a "and also prevent the ammonia from escap- Terrible Lightning in Evgland- Three! Days of f Disasters. During the thunderstorin that passed | * over the neighborhood of Huntingdon on Thursday, Aug.-17, Mr. Goodwin, butler, at Diddington-park (Mr. Thornhill's seat), was killed by lightning at the river side. The deceased started in the afternoon for a few hours' fishing in the Ouse, which runa:no great distance . from the Park. He had not returned to the house at bed- | time, but the other servants --the family being from home---thought he had gone to | visit some friends at a neighboring v illage, | as he was in the habit of doing occasional- ly. Next morning still findiag he had not come home, they searched for him, but without success. On Saturday - morning the search was vigorously renewed by | various parties, exclusive of the servants at the Rall. At noon the poor fellow was | found dead, lying on his face, tree about ten yards from the river side, his fishing-rod and package of 'food near! hiur apparently undisturbed. The body | was very black, and decomposition Had reached a shocking: stage. ¥.The medical men who were sent for pronounced death to have resulted from lightning. On the following afternoon,about four, the vicini- | ty of Hamasterley, in Durham, was visited by a most violent thunderstorm. After one of the crashes, some one looking fron) Hamsterley saw the farmhouse of Knaves- mire, about a mile distant, occupied by Mr, Wilkinson, break out in flames. - Several persons at once went up to the house, when they found Mrs. W ilkinson | lying outside the door on the ground in an | insensible state, her husband with his hands resting om her knee quite dead, and | a child by his side struck blind with the Various stories are corrent as to the manner-in- which the melancholy | occurrence took place, but the most trust- worthy appears to be that Mr. and Mrs. Wilkinson were sitting in the kitchen hav- ing tea, when a terrible flash of lightning, | followed by an awful peal of thunder, took place. - Both ran out to the farm building ! close by to see if the stock was safe, and | ~ when they were returning they were met in the door by another lightning flash. -- | Mr. Wilkinson was killed instantaneously, while his wife and ehild were blinded and rendered insensible. died the following day from the effects of | her injuries, and but little hopes are enter- | De delight _ tained of the recovery of her child. Om the same afternoon a thunderstorm of | great violence burst over Kendal and. the ! "district. It commenced about 2:30, and | contintied till six o'clock. It culminaved | about four in a terrific flash 'of lightning, accompanied by an almost peal of deafening thunder. Another flash and thunder clap fully as violent followed | at six o'clock, after which the storm grad- ually rolled away. At the Kendal railway station the electric fluid entered the room where the telegraph instrument was placed, passed into an 'adjoining room, and again through another door on the | platform.-- At Oxenholme Junction it struck the tele- graph instrument, burst a gaspipe, and "fired the gas, which in its fun, set fire to some woodwork and the wall paper. At Stavely, about four miles from: Kendal, the lightning set fire to a barn, destroying a quantity 'of hay, and also part of 'the building. - Some cows were .struck® and killed at Natland, about a mile from Ken- dal; and on the road from Grange two cows and a horse were killed. | The storm appears to have followed the course of the River Kent; and during its 'continuance an enormous quantity 'of rain and hail fell, doing considerable injury to the grain crops in the district. A large | meteoric stone fell near the Kendal railw ay station. Next day between four and five o'clock | Mr. Thomas Middleton, a well-known far- | was | mer of Abney Grange, Derbyshire, seated at table taking tea with' his wife, when a severe flash of lightning struck his residence. Descending through a bed-| room at the front of the house, the light-' ning struck a bedstead, and passed to gy «= lower room, where Mr: and Mrs. Middle- | 'ton were seated at the tea table. The | former, apparently without any warning, | was killed on the spot, - whilst Mrs. Mid- dleton was much injured" in the leg. -- Robert Wrigh, a man in their employ, who "was also in the same room, was injured in | his cheek. The lightning was so terrific , that.it splintered the bedstead into small pieces. A farmer named Redfern, resid"| ing in the same village, who, was upon a haystack near the scene of the occur- rence, at the same. time, was prefipitated | "from the stack to the ground with Great force. * . | an rm-- a 4 Uf ---- SAVING } MANURE, Lo While it is true that all will | readily admit that no soil, however natur- ally good, can be kept in a state offertility | and capable of ploducing heavy crops, | without the yearly application of fertil-! izers in some form; yet the great majority; do not take #8 much pains to collect' 'and | "save the manure made on their farms as they should, and probably would, if they farmers "could be made to realize its, full valie. -- Instead of plowing and sowing and work- ing over a large number of acres, year after year, with the apphcation of little or no manure, as many do, and then, at -har-| vest, working and traveling over this large | area of land, to gather a small crop, the | better way is to take a smaller picce of land and manure it highly, till it thorough- | ly, and have the satisfaction of har est- ing a large crop. . To this all th manure | should be carefully applied. ™ a com- mon, but bad practice, for. farmers' to genes throw the- manure f from their stables into] Mente for the Dominion, will insure 'a "bottle, the open air, for the spring rains to leach | out the strength, and for the hot summer | sun to burn. . But if the farmer is so situ- | "ated as tofbe able to provide a shelter for | the manure, inuch of the evil resulting from its exposure to the open air, can be obviated by drawing a few. loads of soil or dry! sawdust, and keeping the manure-heap | constantly a few inches deep with such materials. Common soil will dovery well if these substances cannot be obtained readily. Leaf mould from the woods, or any of the substances mentioned, should be daily scattered over the cow-yards to absorb the liquid manure, which is much more valuable than the solid portions, Many farmers have REAL MINES OF WEALTH Wy: and "lands, the soil of o oly of rotten leaves, POOR: cp under al } sides those I have mentioned, and { will not fail to feed you in return.- instantaneous | Kendal to consequences of Self- | Abuse may be effectually removed & por. _rees, a and the § gram ad I weeds that have | | growa and decayed upon them, as well as very fine minefal and arimal substances { which have washed into these - depressions | | from the uplands. Such swamp soil is | therefore very rich, and when daawn out | and exposed to the action of the atmos- phere, and a small quantity of lime mixed Bi with it, the compost will make manure | nearly equal in value to. that obtained from the stables. EVERY DESGRIPTION A heap of dry leaf mould or fine rotten | | wood, can be easily accumulated, upon | { which the suds frofii the wash-tub and all the slops from the dwilling-house, should | { be thrown. Bones, fish-heads and scales, | refuse of vegetables, and many other sub- stances, especially all containing salt, | { should be buried in this heap, ard ad- ditions to the heap can be made from time to time, as yvhe farmer has leisure. In J's way, a heap of the best. of manure | wi'l soon be obtained. Many things be- which {are genera"y wasted, can be saved with a little labor. Farmers, feed your land well, and it WH Pearson, in N. Y. Dbsevver. a m-------- It's your tail fellows who are luckiest in love. The ladies are favor of Hy-men. WEN a girl falls in love with an Irish. man her heart always goes pity Pat. always all in | Way are Cashmere shawls like deaf peo- | ple! 7 Because you can't make them here. HERE FORE PARTIES TROUBL- od 'with Dyspeépsiaor Liver Complaint have been unable to find a medieine to reach their cases; but H E. ROWE, of is now _present- ing to thet i hilic a prep cularly | adapted for h abo complaints. Its merits are amply proven by imonials from those who Yave been bene Atted by jts'use. Itis called the * Eureka.' Give the advestisement, ¥ which is te -be hound 'in arother column, a perusal 'Canadian Pain Destroyer | ( § A FAMILY MEDICINE, IT "I well and favorably known, relieving thous- ands from pain in Side, Back and Head, Coughs, Colds, Sere Throat, Sprains, Bruises, Cramps in 3 the. Stomach, Rolera Morbus. Dységery, Bowel Complaints, Bums, Scalds; Frost Bites, dc. The CaNapiaN Paix DESTROYER has now | been before ie public for a length of time, and wherever seq is well liked, hever fail in a single instancéto give permanent relief when The poor woman Fer used, and ve have never known a single case 0: dissatisfaction, whee the directions have been p Sherly followed, but on the contra: ul with its operations, and speal thie highest terms of its virtues and magic - | effect. We speak from eX ing tested it thorough® are suffering from A, of the complaints which being a Sovereign Remedy. : and therefore thoes whe The astonishing efficacy of the Canadian Pain Destroyer in curing the discases for which it fs recommetided, and its wonderful effects in sub- auing the torturous pains of Rheumatism, and in ving Nervous Affections, cntitle it to high TE ihe list of Remedies. Orders sre com'ng ih from Medicine Dealers, in all parts of the country, for further supplies, and each testifying ~ to the universal satisfaction it gives. ! The Canadian Pain Destroyer never fails to ve immediate relief. All Medicine . Dealers ceep it ; Physicians order and use it; d ne family will be without it after trying it. Price, only Twenty-five Cents per bott] For sale W. T| Atkinson and 4 Deans Oshawa; in Whitby by J. H. Gerrie and J. Byrne n Brookiyn by John Ww arren. 4 In Memoriam. GAINST EXPENDITURES in honor of the dead, Heaven has uttered no prohibition, and Earth is not | injured, but benefitted, by them.. All those' beautiful emblems which adorn the many tombs around which we love to linger, assure us we are in a world of warm and loving hearts; the adorni af the scpulclires af the alleviates ovr soothes the swounded heart. I. also cheers the be- reaved to krow tha. an addidonal em- bellishment. of the grave presents stron T attractions to arrest the atten- the stranger, and causes him to use and learn the name of oae who sas shared so largely in the love of other-, We ake this method to inform you that v-e can fill orders for decorating the ves of departed | friends, at low res, exécuted in the best style | of workmanship. MONUMENTS, TABLETS, ETC., OF THE FINEST QUALITY OF ITALIAN & AMERICAN MARBLE: --AND SCOTCH ABERD! N GRANITE, supplied on short notice. Everything pertal to Cemetery work will with prompt attention, by leaving or- ] ders with | C. BOUNSALL, Bowmanville, 'loved ones emed---- Parley's Arabian Oil. FOR HORSES:AND CATTLE. NEVER-FAILING REMEDY, THIS valuable preparation combines all the medicinal virtue of those articles which long experience has proved "wo Joscis the most and eflicient properties he cure of Flesh x ounds, Sprains, Bruises, Galls of all kinds, Craci Heels, Ring Bou€. Spavin,- Callous, Fis- tula, Sweeney, Scratches or Grease, Strairs, Lar-eness, Mange, Whitlows, | Gorns, Sand Cracks, Foundered Feet, Horn _Dis- femper, Swellings ad many o her discases which horses and cai. le ace subjec. to. This celebrated Linhné:. has been used for many years, and, its curative properties thoroughly teswed, and is conceded to the cheapest and most reliable remedy for all exter- nal Fomplains ever offered to "the 'public--it never er fails when timely used and faithfully ap pli External Poisons, § To be had of a!' Dru chanis hroughou. the per bo e. Northop & Lyman, Newdastle, , prietors for Canada. For-sale by W. T. Atkinson and Dr. Deans Oshawa; in Whitby by J. H. Gerrieand J. Byrn ists and Country Mer dominion. Price 25 cents Ontario, Pro- | n Brooklin by John Warren. The Great Female Remedy. | | JOB MOSES' PERIODICAL PILLS.} {us INVALUABLE MEDICINE IS! unfailing in the of all those painful and dangerous ase" to which the female consti- | tution is subject. I..noderates all excess and re- moves all obstructio.s, ¢ ud a speedy cure may be | relied on. TO MARRIED LADIES Itis peculiarly suited. It will, in a short time, bring on the monthly period with regularity. i These Pills should not be taken Females during the FIRST THREE MON ribs of Preg- | nancy, as they are sure to bring on Sa Frey | but at any other time they are safe. In all Cases of Nervous and Spinal Affections, Pains in the Back and Limbs, Pat J on slight | exert'ou, Palpitation of the heart, he and | Whites, these Pills will effect a cure when all other means have failed ; and githough a power- ful remedy, do not contain Iron, calomel, anti- mony, or anything hurtful to the constitution. Full directions in the pamphlet around package, which should be Carelli preserv bv 'JOB MOSES, NEW YORK, SOLE PROPRIETOR. $1.00 and 12} cents for tage, enclosed Northrop & an, Neweastie: ont ra | ntaining over 50 pills, by return ox sale by W. T. Atkinson and Dr. Deans wa; in Whit by J. H.|Ge! > a yori by John W aren, Sfieand. Byrue A Lecture to Young i J= PU suis A J sia Py t Front ns and radical Sure cof ms Emisions, | fexid Debits: and Tapeahas, Comemmption n. Epilepsy. and' Fis Mental and CUTE Abuse, a yy alin fed J al] EWE Author of the * wh' a. b, ble Lactate, repent 4 Sir FP chdmise: « ture ves perience that the e swt or elf. medicines, and without rous surgical o) ations, bougies, instruments, rings, or cordlals out a mode of cure at once certain an. by which ev sufferer, no matter a is suadition ma; may" be may cure himself chee oly, Teately, Gh radically, THIS LEC- TURE WILL PROVE A" BOON TO THOU SANDS anD] THOUSANDS, nt r envel to an: from, slime © on receipt of Slope.to fd Cul 1 ALSO: verells "Marriags Guide, 1 Bowery, GES P ob ER ox i 58 YN dt ve een ---- P LA 1 N ORNAMENTAL PRINTING EXECUTED IN A STYLE rience in the matter, hav- | it is Fecomunended, may depend. upon ns SECOND TO OFFICE IN THE DOMINION. Birarann PRINTING ESTABLISHMENT. NEW TYPE, NEW PRESSES. | ORDERS BY MAIL PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. WR. C PROPRIETOR, Medical "Hall, -- DR. DEANS AVING PURCHESED THE DRUG BUBINESS OF ROBINSON & Ga., . would inform the public that he has just received a full asfortmeat of Drugs, Patent Medicines, Perfumery, Dye Supe, TOILET ARTICLES, &v., WHICH HE WILL SELL AT THE MOST REASONABLE PRICES. Dr. Dean.' Office in the Drug Store. Remember the stand, nearly opposite Hindes' Hotel, Oshawa, April 13th, 1.1, 1th fez. RETIRING FROM BUSINESS. ¥; CA I M I SETA TL, WILL SELL THE Ww HOLE OF HIS STOCK OF Dry Good,s Boots and Shoes! 2#~ AT COST PRICE AND 'UNDER, =# The whole must be sold without reserve within the next few weeks, to make room for | his successor in business, NOW IS THE TIME Ww hile this Bale lasts, to buy your Spring and Summer Goods, in Dress Goods! HATS, CAPS, id E VERY YARIE TY SHIRTINGS, PRINTS, LU. STRES, FRENCH MERINOES, : French Delaines, Hemp Carpets, Hollands, Zickings, Sheetings, C LOTIING? TWEEDS, COATINGS, TROWSERINGS Towelings, &e. Produce taken in Exchange for Goods. OSHAWA, APRIL M4, 1871. 141. -- - EE ---- HAVE THIS DAY SOLD ov T ALL INTEREST. IN MY BUSINESS IN | |] Ries probe & W, GILLETT, » Whe will earry on the same, aiid (0 whem all outstape- HIRAM GILLETT Port Hope, March 28, 1871. » The subscribers have this day entered into partyerstitp as Dry Goads Merchants; under the na ha nd sty c of II. & W. GILLETT, and are now receiving their SPRING AND SUMMER STOCK. which in price and variety will compare favorably with any in the country. NEW LIGHT PRINTS; SPLENDID VALUE. NEW LIGHT BRILLIANTS, Good lang Clisap. BARGAINS IN DRESS GOODS. HOSIERY AND GLOVES. PARASOLS, SMALL WARESS. No Tiouble to Show Goods, GREY-AND WHITE COTTONS,. &«. PRODUCE TAKEN in Exchange FOR 'GOODS. {'orner King and Simcoe Streets, Oshawa. HENRY W. GILLETT. WALTER B. GILLETT. Oshawa, May 4, 1871 tf 'postAu] lis uy "EH. ARMES ' ~NEW -=I Shuttle or Lock-Stitch Sewing Machines For Family Use and Light Manufactuping } LJ SIMPLE AND COMPACT! PRICE, $28! 1 378VvdNA ANY LN3IOI443 HE MOST SIMLPE MACHINE IN THE MARKET -ONLY ABOUT ONE- the ts in its consiraciion that AY nh | Fou RTH as liable to get out of order, R is dorable ju all Ls. a ey Toth UNE | fans e rest of ov Jour Motion Feed, Swe ene Ie aug. w Fest? Tees, wok without ebr ge el. ver TENSION . HUT™LE OR LOCK-STIICH, alike on oth sides, 5 pl. | Ler Py lif, ona WiLL Sor RIP. If. nha rapidly nd uses a 8.0 § eee eo," 3 xn ho) { ed into place, and not car so liable t. Jp is a y ) able AR X Ma aghly on phi kik | ecual to any of er ht will Hem, Fell, Tuck, Cord, Bind, Fri, Gather] Quilt, Braid, OR ANYTHING THAT ANY OTHER MACHINE WILL DO. IT 18 JUST THE MACHINE FOR | Private Families, Miltiners, Dressmakers, Tailors and Farmers | | There are many points of excellence about the Machine, superior to al explain here, but will be pleased to forward Circu'ars Ee + ih his ve anno DISCOUNT TO CLERGCYMEN. MACHINES: FriAY WARRANTED: AGENT wasited in Oshawa, and in every other town where we hive not alread ed. Larger Inducements than any other ( Hay T4olns bial Ne. 7 Rossin Mouse Block, Yoronts, Ont. {od NOTA BENE. | WALTER WIGG & SON, Cabinet Malers, Undertakers, &. AVING GREATLY ENLARGED OUR WAREROO. 8, V. Hu ded Spmtideralie NEW, STOCK thereto, a cordial inviation M5: AND LIKEWISE Great ndisiinl held aut to bose purchasing at our Establishmen SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO THE UNDERTAKING DEPARTMENT. A SPLENDID NEW HERSE FOR HIRE. Coffins kept constantly on hand orm de to order. A choice lot of Carriages-and- Pérambulators just receiver Cheap for Cash. Last, but not Least, is Paling's Patent Balance Window. Blind Lifter, thing of the kad fa nse at tac poo THE NEW DOMINION FURNITURE WAREROOM KING ST. EAST, "OSHAWA. . ow & "se ~- BX "THE « Ca HALL. MACH! | No. Two, mediums size, for Farmers having more use for a Motvér end ev oy motion positive, | ust io | J. C. TODD, General Agent. | Vong Taylor's Sulky Horse Rake. OSHAWA, ONTARIO, ESTABLISHED 1851. ad Gf BE PROPRIETORS. WE DESIRE TO CALL ATTENTION TO OUR NUMBER ONE AND TWO BUCKEYE COMBINED REAPER AND MOWER, With Johnson's Self Rake, Improved for 1871. We believe this Machine, as we now bufld it, to be the most perfoet Reaper ahd Mower ever | yet offered to the public of Canada, Among its many advantages we call attention to the following: ' # It has no Gears on the Driving Wheals, & a b) " g g ] "ea | | | | The Best Cathariie 3 of "Any Age or Country. JEW DI VERY OP DICIYE sre pe LET EY VeaSTACLE hn rion wiag ioe fom meer y or o.aer fons; t sey oi + eu iri) vadesrlle ov. ise to deco mie, ry Lve co Dea'p ( tue tone rac i 1 wvredoa. 4 ges 'we L'oor r3¢ Seo a EL ER LR PT y Cel? GAR Tre ge nov iced ell vaio « Ve vecd hea to oe a fi 'vel ~y amily pPhand well Jayolat.), = THEY ALE SUGAR COATED. wm Sold all druggists ad medicine a ore BENTLEY& CO, | R. BOYER'S { 'GALYANIC FLUID, Universally acknowledged to the most powerful Li. ments for 2 cue of RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, | | > 23 L for al cases where an external ap has prov. prove) pues 8 pi& Sold by all Druggists and Medicing WOODRUFF, BENTLEY & CO., Propriotors, Brough m, Oo -= ---- Important to the Public! aviv | Enabling it to pass over marshy or sandy ground without clogging up the costings re rendutin)} | TG thao SUBSCRIBER, IN RETURN- it less liable to breakage. It is furnished with . ee to the ihhal ats of West Dux thanks A support which they h . given bm begs to inform ell those who are In Four Knives, Two for Mowing and Two fof Reaping, one of which has a | pd sickle edge for custing ripe, clan' grain, the other a smooth edge for | cutting grain in which there is grass or (soed clover. Ly RUTTAN ad R STOVE OVE, Gloves, Hose, Tapestry, Kidderminster and I Ya It has the malleable guards both on the [Mower Bar and Reaper Table, with best cast stee Which § a) BO sno Ledger Plates. Jt is also furnished with our . New: Patent Tilting Table for Picking up Lodged Grain. | | | | | | | his is the only really valvable Tilting Table' offered on any combined Reaper and Mower. thing cee AN It is just hes, build- Halls, and public ings. He Is also manufacturing the BEST HOT AIR DRUM in Canada. |The Table canbe vey easily raised or lov By de Driver hid Seat 1S BW I "without stopping his Team. This is one of the most important improvements effectedin any Machisedueing the Pastiwo sesy oes ANY ONE' OR ATL oF THE ARMS OF THE REEL le 'an be made to act as Rakes at the option of the Driver, by a Lever readily operated by his foot. | The Cutting apparatus is in front of the Maching, and therefore whether Reaping or Mowing, the | entire work of the Machine is under the eye of the Driver while guiding his team. THI Table is 80 cemsiructed as to . Gather the Grain into a Bundle before it leaves the Table, and dit it | ship of Cart in a more compact form than any other Beel Rake. This Table is attached to the Machiné both in frant and rear of the Driving Wihieel, which en- { ables it to pass over rough groynd with much greater case and less injury to the Fable. The Grain | } Wheel Axis ison a line with the axle of the Dyive Wheel, which enables it to furn the corners readily. | "The Rakes are driven by Gearing instead of Chains, and therefore have, a steady uniform motion, s | Makin ig them much loss lialle to breakage on uneven ground, and more regular in remioving the] | grain. The Gearing is very simple, strong and durable. The Boxes are all lined with | BABBIT METAL. The Parts aro all numbered, so that the REPATRS oan be ordered by telegraph or otherwise, by simply giving the number of the part wanted. | There is no side Draught/in either reaping or mowing, and the Machine is so perfectly balanced | that there is no pressure on the horses' Sacks Sher heh Meaping oe mowing. An our malleable | castings, where they are subject to muclistrain, have been Twice annealed, thereby rendering them both tough and OUR JOHNSON RAKE Is so constucted as {6 raise the cam so far above the Grain Table that the Grain does not interfere with the machinery of the Rakes or Reels. | We make the above machines in two sizes: No. One, large size, for Farmers who have a large amount to reap. | He than a reaper; : % . With the exception of difference in = size, these Machines are. similar & every respect, Our No. 2 Machine supplied a want hereto fore unfilled; viz :--A medium betweets the Jun. Mower and | large combined Machine, both in size and price. We shall distribute our sample machines in | March among our Agents, that intending purchasers may have an early opportunity of examining f their merits. | And we guarantee that all Machines shipped this season shall be equal in quality and firiish 16 the: esamig@ePibjtapby our Agents. | { nspecting our Machines, as we believe they are | offered on this continent. | ff EE » : w wt F We invite the public to withhold giving their qrders until they have had an opportunity of by $v lige: evef 1 L KJ We also offer among our other Machines : "JOH NSON'S Seif: Railing Reaper, improved forl871, with two knives, smooth and sickle edge, and malleable Buards Woob's Patent Self-Raking Reaper." | 11 = | BuckkeYE Reaper No.1, with Johnson's! Self-Rake. | BUCKEYE Reaper No. 2, with Johnson's iSelf-Rake. | Ox10 Combined Hand Raking Reaper and Mower. | CAYUGA CHIEF, Jdr.,, Mower. F Buckeve Mower-Noy ba. Bickeve Mower No. 2 BaLL's Ohio Mower No. 1. | Ohio, Jr, Mower. No / Farmer's Favorite Grain Drill. Champion Hay Tedder AND OUR CELEBRATED : . HALL THRESHER & SEPARATOR drat Teatly improved for 171, with either Pht, Peltor Planet, Wood Power. Wa shal ses ge fr the Ful resin "vit ve husy or Halls § or 0. Hors = 2 NEW CLOVER THRESHER AND HULLER, b. { NOT IEh TaRerier 0. ny other Napliafore dmrqticed. | or oT (Sw . A mew and complete Illustrated Catalogue of all our Machines to being TE IA IO Aen Te aa. Bua, Al our Machines are rearvanted to give satisfaction, and Purchasers will have an op< portunity of testing them, both in Joins and Reaping mired Pally conchuds fhe puns x bre; thay will, be For g le. ia EW GLEN, June lst, hd ae Ara "rae Ta av nt Bi AEs bo LEWIS QUICK. -4 Bowmanville, August 9, 1871. i Chancery Notice to creditors of DAVID HOOEY, DECEASED. =e dg PAIES ry lg the solicitor of the a of the | particulars o oF thei Sama, i held ts pnd the in default hereof Decree. Svs i Hit i wy ( A I. § © "EUREKA" FY 1 3:8 Xk b.8 iI X46 amon oh ee' "EU REKA" 18 A PURELY VEGETABLE MEDICINE FOR THE CURE OF DYSPEPSIA, "LIVER!'COMPLAINT LO8S OF APPETITE, GENERAL DIBILITY AND ALL DISEASES of THE BLOOD by NORTHROP & LYMAN, Newcastle, Ont. J. WINER &Co., Hamilton. B. H. MITCHEL, j All operation Veterina ENRY'S Oshawa. | D\ pen WwW. 6. es THA ory. ARRIST } alle, yp Je Streets. MONEY J.E. Fa

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy