Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 3 Apr 1884, p. 7

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, ___- ~._;..v ception of the unmistakable decomposition of the body, are to be regarded as perfectly conclusive. It is certain that the possibil- ity of such a frightful death weighs on the mind oz many of the French. as. according to a. recent declaration of the President of Chamber of Notaries, (xpress instructions are given in one will out; of every ten to have the testator’e heart pierced by a. quali- fied surgeon before the lid of the coffin is screwed down. The writer of a. paper recently read be- fore the French Academy .of Medicine ex- presses the opinion that one in every 5,000 persons is buried alive, while official statis- tics show that the mortality among sailt rs from shipwreck averages one in 4,000, The question has of late been much discussed by the medical body just mentioned ; and it seems to be settled that none of the accept- ed indication of death, vzith the single «x- ,.-_‘:-_ -t ;L_ .,- _ A singular instance of kle tomania. was brought before the Criminal 80ml; in Paris the other day, An Englishman and his Wife, the former aged 67 and the letter 63, were arrested for stealing some objects of trifling value at the Magasins du Louvre. They live in the neighborhood of Paris, and are in possession of an income amply suflicient for all their requirements. Both of them declared that the impulse to appropriate the stolen articlr s ‘was irresist ble. They were consequently examined by physicians, who gave their opinion that this statement, ex- traordinary as it may appear, was perfectly correct, as regards bath husband and wife. The prisoners were in consequence acquit- ted on the ground of irresponsibility for their actions. A peer’s daughter, who is the wife of a Lieutenant-Colonel, and has lived with her husband for seven years in India, and ac- companied him to the Mediterranean, in a letttr to the London Standard, declares that "the moral tone of English ladies (es- pecially of those whom one is forced to as- sociate with in military life and at military and naval stations) is decidedly low. Most of them, from their school days, have wast- ed their time poring over dangerous novels and immoral books, and their everyday cor.- versation is such as most gentlemen in civil life Would blush to hear.” An interesting ceremony took place at Birmingham, England, recently, on the oc. casion of the “home-coming”of a man named Hall, afttr twenty years‘ penal servitude for wife murder. Thousands of people, it is stated, met Hall at the railway station and gave him an enthusiastic reception, greet- fng him wrth loud cheers until he was driven off in a. cab with his relatives. These tokens of sympathy and esteem must have somewhat surprised Hall. \Vile murder was, twenty years ago, looked upon as a. rather serious ofience, even whz n, as in the case of Hall, it was committed under cir- cumstmces of extreme provocation. At Brussels lately an elderly porter. who bore an excellent characu r, was sent by his employcr to take some money to the bank. He did not: return, and his wife found his body at the Morgue. He had been found dying of ceretral appoplexy in the atreet. It is surmised that he had been robbed of the money, and had wandered aronni in great mental ag< ny, afraid to go homu. There are five spiritualistic organs in France, four in Belgium, two in Holland, sight in Spain two in Italy, and three in Germany. In addition to several journals devoted to the cause in England and the United States, it has one organ each in Austria, Russia, Mexico, the Antilles, Chili, Brazil, Uruguay, the Argentine Republic, Australia, India, and Cape Colony. A young Parisian who lately came sud- denly to his end by the knife of a. comrade was found to be curiously tattooed. Be- neath his breast a. serpent raised his head in the direction of the heart. and all around were inscribed: “I have been deceived in the past; the present torments me; the future frightens me." The death wound was at the words, “I have bzen deceived in the past.” A man named Chenworth, who lives in the village of Cowboy, Kan, owns a horse which he sends to a store three miles dis- tant for provisions. A note tied to the horse’s mane has a list of the articles want- ed. They are strapped in a bag to his back. The animal never stops to nibble grass, but gots the who}e distance at a brisk trot. ‘ At the Intel: of the Southdown fox hounds at Fortslade, in Eng‘and, the other day, a. fox went straight for Poyniuas, ran into the church, and took refuge in the pulpit. He was quickly lrought out of the sacred edifice and turued loose, when he was im- m‘ediately run into by the bounds and kill~ Detroit has been boasting of its oldest in- habitant. There seems to be no doubt that he is 105 years old. He was born on St. Patrick's Day, 1779, and was in the lush rebellion of 98. He drinks Whiskey and smokes a. black and wicked-looking pipe. The newspaper columns headed “Born, ’ “Married,” and “Died,” have been various- ly paraphrased in the VVeat. One paper has itf‘fiatcbed, Matched, Dispatched,” and an- other “Buds, Blossoms, Cypress.” A jeaflous husband slapped a man's face in a I’mvidence street car because the man’s eyes had been staring at his wife’s face. The car stopped a bchk further on, and a. little girl entered and led the man away. He was totally blind. â€"The Lyndon Medical Times says thata hundred deaths have been probably caused by carelessness as to dairy drainage and water supply, for one that is traceable to adulteration. Los Angeles, 031, can he distinctly 56 from the Island of San Clemente, eigl‘ miles out at sea. The plans of t? place at Antwar exded upon, and A petition signed by 10,000 Scotchmen against the abolition of the feather bonnet in the British army is to be presented in Parliament very shortly. onth. HEADABLE PARAGRAPHS. xhibition at Antwerpâ€"A Jealous Hus- band-The {Okla 15 Inhabitantâ€" An Intelligent Horseâ€" Buried Aliveâ€" &c , &c. :lectric fights on the high :man ZTE drk will t xhibition to film :ar have been do- : high masts dxetinctly‘ a; egm ne 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 had a. very broad and elevated sen- timent in this regard, for he is quoted as having said :â€"“0i all people women are the most diflidut to manage. If you are familiar with them they become forward, and if you keep them at a. distance they become dia- contented.” Many women arekin the habit of praying that they might be born men in the next world. In a. fit 0i rage Adelbert Clark. of Elba, N. Y., beat his wife cruelly. The neigh- bors who were attracted by the noise took Clark into the woods, thrashed him, tan-red and feathered him. and sent him home. A Terre Haute, Ind., man employs his divorced wife as a servantlgirl, and the neighbors say that she has a better ward- roba than when she was his wife. 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 bride. This gorgeous sedan chair was followed by others, also by gain decanted jinrikishas, in which were seated the relatives of both the contracting parties. More so-called musicians followed. and the procesions wound up with a. load of boxes, which I in- ferred contained the marriage offerings, and, perhaps, the trousseau of the bride. 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 st 1e of the affair, I thought it was a funeral, at I soon dis- covered the difference. A inner a! procession is a more cheerful institution than a wed- ding procession, with the possible exception, per-naps, 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 cornss. But this wedding procession. First came a. dozen musicians who were beating gouge 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 of gilded tables with elaborately carved and pointed canopies over them, and allsorts of enables upon them. The di- play of fruit was quite tempting, and I long- ed for a. slice of the roast pig and the roast sheep. But there were also native dishes, which, by experiment, I found to be far from appetizing. Thus far everything was arranged iust as the funeral procession would be, and was composed of the same features. 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 channels, when the thaw: come, unimpeded by the protect- ing trees. siaele wHich the goods inter‘poaa diialége much of its violence. Cyclones, too, are necessarily more vio lent and desolating in districts where they sweep, uncheked by 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- It is stated that for some years past there had been a. wanton and reckless cutting down pf the forests in the region of the A!- Ieghanies, and near the sources of the Ohio River ; and we can easily trace the recent flogds‘to that unwise policy. 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 min- 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, and Irotect it from the rays of the sun, so that it; takes weeks for it to melt 1mg flow down the slopes. 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 floods which, overflowing the banks of the river Danube, carried sucn havoc and misery to the Hungarian dwellers on its banks a. few years: ago, must be attributed to the same cause. In many arts of Eu‘ rope, Asia and America. in eed, regions may be found, once flourishing and fruitful, wnich are now dreary wastes, deserted long since by human beings, as a. result at the cutting down of the forests. The Fed of the beautiful river Ural in Asiatic Russia has become in process of time the channel of frightful torrents, which rush down and Wreck the human settlements on its picturesque banks. The river used to he broad and Clear, and full of fish. The dc » etruction of the forests in the upper valley has caused it to dry up into a. small and sluggish stream. no longer navigable, and deprived of its fiuny babltmnts. When the deep snows upon the Ural Mountains begin to thew, there is no longer any barrier to the Reebok which come roaring down to the rivet-basin. wolence and (1 year, and cause too, had the Oh news came of a 1 For two successive year the valley of the Ohio Riv ited by the disaster of d \Vhole villages have beet Heath the swelling waters. persons have been made min “1006 flgods have vu-z )ives have been lost. The flmd this year excm violence and deatructivem T A Chinese Wedding Procession. Floods and Forests. uccessive years the dwellers in ‘ the Ohio River have been vis- disaater of destructive floods. {es have been auomerged be- welling waters. Thousands of 'e been made destitutoby the soda have wrought and many :en lost. atruotiveness that ( greater distress, Sza a begun to subside wh :eded in vain 11655 that 1 me, 11 )f In ‘rcely an the :eping A FIRST-CLASH Annch This is. and must. continue to be, the ecxlamation of every one who has used PUTNAM'S PUNLESB Coax Ex~ TRAGI‘OR. for it 15. without exception, the only remedy in the market. that. will remove earns without pain. All we ask for the Corn Extrac- tor is a fair trial. for it will give to you what it has already given to thousands of others sutfer- ing from come, unbounded satisfaction. Puff nam's Painless Corn Extractor is gold every where, Beware of cheap counterfeits. Polson a 00,, Kingston. pronre. A deep true love wi 11 lift a. soul out ofithe a hadows of selfishness and the mud of fleshâ€" linoaa when all other powerl combined have failed to extricate it from the slough. The delay: of good and dutiful intentions, which ultimately luv! to the defelt of them, cause more regret and ropentance in men’s lives than my other class of causes. It 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 cup- tivity, by enclosing a large tract of suitable country and turning into it such as were heavily msrkcd with large patches, 3. sure sign that they were inclining towards albin- ism, the desired result would be attained in time. ..... .vu null'vlvvvu vv-vMA uuuu EVE; ireâ€"a-lrwhite 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 nglgs yellow.”r with three others, all so-culled white ele- phants, in comparison with whlch he cer- tainly deserved the proud title. Were I to describe him as white, I should lay myself open to the charge of colour blindness, but he was quite an albino, the Whole body being of a._pale reddish-brown colour, with â€" The King of Siam has for one of his titles “Lord of the White Elephant ;” and the Order of the White Elephant was sent to her Majesty Queen 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€"â€""Then came the hero of the day, the white elephant himself, in company _,:LL .1 From the published descriptions and illustrations we have nowazood idea of what Barnnm’s so-called White elephant )8 like. Mr. Tegetmeier, of the Field, 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 existence. He has caught, I think 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. This may be his ex- perience; but Mr. Carl Bock, author of "Tke Head Hunters of Borneo,” has just published his “Temples and Elephants," being a narrative ot explorations in Upper Siam and Lao. He arrived in Banarkok in June 1881, a. few days before the arrival there of an albino elephant. a coloured portrait of which he gives in his book. Good luck is good sense and good courage with industry. inpired by noble impulses, guided by intelligence and fore~thought. Bad luck is laziness, stupidity. carelessness, recklessnsss. It is but another name {or the penalty for bad management. 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 becomes bankrupn. Health is the bed-plate on whichfthe whole mental machinery may rest and work If this be displaced or cracked, all the me- chanism that stands on it will be jarred and disturbed and made ineffective. "fiecamse the cur ? 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 proverb rum, “Becmse the cur has bitten me, shall I bite Reason can not show itselt more reason- able than to cease reasoning on things that are above reasoning. Let us (njoy the fugitive hour no harbor, time has no share ; i and carries us with in Some old men like to give go to console themselves for their i longer to give hid examples. The auperiority of some men is merely local. They are great because their associ- ates are little. A man as he manages himself may die old at thirty or young as eighty. Youth is a continual Intoxication, for the fever of n awn. If you intend to do a mean thing. wait till If you intend to do a mean thing. wait till tomorrow. If you intend to do a noble thing, do it now. Charms Latrike the sight, but merit wins the soul. To rule one) anger is well ; to yrevsnt it is better. To know how to wait is the great secret of success. Don’t eat in less than two hours after bathing. Charity comes too late that comes for the asking. B mks, like friends, shouldbe few and well chosen. himac ml Pitienc TI 1O The White Elephant. never may smile, and smil i}! adhere to him that abandons .‘EAR mile is the suns 3 man EDS 11.8 0? TRUTH RV mos es one SE its fruit hine 1y one r. Man has it rushes on )od precepts inability no wisdom are certain he will do as stated above, or we would not give all this space to this long description of this plan. The La- rlies’ Journal is a. 20 page Monthly Fash- ion and Domestic Magazinexg; Two full pages of newest music are given in each issue ; large illustrations of the latest things in fashion circles ; one or two seri- al stories and a short story; domestic and household hints ; besides a large quantity of miscellaneous reading, particularly to interest ladiesflln short, it is the cheap- given in the May number of the Journal. Our readers may be assured that all the rewards, as given above, will be promptly and cheerfully handed over to the success- ful ones, as soon as possible after the close of the competition. We know the publisher of the Ladies’ Journal, and we Each competitor must, in every case, send 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 youfirstsaw this notice. The letters must all be post-mark- ul where mailed not latter than April let, the closing day of this competition. The correct address is Editor Ladies’ Journal, Toronto, Canada. The names enri post- ofiico addresses (and street and number, when in the citzg; of those who no uno- wssxui inpbtai g, these rewsréllwii be Then even the last ones are to be re- membered in a long list of consolation re- wards. These rewards will be given to the last seventy-seven persons who send cor- 'rect answers to the Bible questions given above. ‘ 1. To the last correct answer received 7 One Elegant Silver Tea. Service 0 six pieces. latest design ...... . ....... 2. One Gentleman's Beautiful Solid Gold Hunting Case Genuine Wel- tham Movement. oases finely en- graved . . . . . . . . . . 3. One Lady's Solid Gold Hunting 0336 Watch. Genuine American .. .. .. . . 4 } Seven Fine Solid Coin Silver Hunt- to ing Case Watches. value 820 10 each... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...... Every competitor must send fifty cents 1:1 Post-office order, scrip or small coin, (no postage stamps), for which the La- dies” Journal will be sent for one year to my desired address. Post-office orders are procurable at any post-oflice, 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 ofâ€" fered above. the sender of the middle cor- rect answer of the whole competition from first to Last, and the twenty persons next fol/owinq who send correct answersâ€"will receive the following rewards, respect- ively :â€" €13 l6) each . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . l7 pFive Ladiea‘ Elegant Coin Silver In Hunting Case Watches, valued at '11 s 519 L300 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Five Gentleman's Heavy Coln Sil- } ver Hunting Case Watches val- ued 115318 each . . . . . . . . . . .7 )Bix Elegant New Spring Print u “used, utter-nu from Petleys’, 'l‘Z Toronto, Seach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -3 éFive So'id Aluminum Gold Hunt- '0 ink Case Wawhes, valued at 817 37 each. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Flve Hunting Case Solid Nickel if; bllver Watches. 316 each ....... . l l ) Five Open Face Solid Nlckel Heavy m S Bevellod Crystal ‘Vatches. $5 47 each . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . '8 Seven Renowned Waterbury Watckes. 85 each ............. m Triple Silver Plated Tea. Spoons. 156 $1 each . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . '37 P Thlrty-nino Beautifully Bound to Volumes of Shakeapeare's Com- ms S pleze Works, £2.50 each . . . . . . . . . . 10.7} Fifty-six Volumes. Beautifully to Bound. Teunysou's Poems, $2.25 ICU each . . . . . . . . . . . . . . lGl Sixty-one Elegant Triple Sllver m Plated, on Solid Steel, Butter .2] ( Knives. $1 each . . l . . . . . . _ . . _ . . . l _ 55 ETwere Sefs. (half dozen each), la tg Six Well~Bound Volumes of Tenny‘ son's Poems, $2.25 Slx Hunnng Case Solid Nickel Silver Watches, 315 each ........ One \Vanier Sewing Mabfiffiej $230 .. . Six Hunting Case Solid Nickel ' Watches, valued $15 each ...... Right Solid Aluminum Gold Hunt- ing‘ Cass VVatchos. value $11 Twenty-five Ele ant Triple Silver Plnlted Pickle oxks, value $1.10 euc \ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... . ....... . . . Twenty-two Solid Triple Silver- Plafied Butter Knives. value $1 eac . . . . . . .......... ...... franconson ATION REWARDS. fight Open Face Extra Heavy Cr 5- ml h Sohd Nickel VVAtches. 12 can . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ............... bottle xty-one Elegant Triple Silver Plated. on Solid Steel, Butter Knivea.$1en.ch ..... . ........ TE“: QUESTIONS. r": the word grandmother occur in the alc; if to, where. it recorded anywhere in the Bible that )rr p’ at or propheteas had anyming to do L11 3 college. a Open Face Solid Nickel Hesvy cyenod Crystal ‘Vatches, $15 MIDDLE R EWARDS. 3.011 Renowned Waterbury ‘aes. $5 each ............. rle, elegantly engraved y's Solid Gnld Hun'ing Case Genuine W altnum .. :gant Black Silk Dressen, fie from Petley ,-, Toronto, 330 4 mniful Triple e Pitchers. v ‘11 Face Solid Nickel 78, Heavy Crystal, value :liea' Elegant Coin S ‘g (Jase Watches, valu $18 ditch men's Heavy m; Case Wat . (half dozen each), I Plated Tea. Spoons‘ Case Solid Nickel ms. 316 each ........ anutifullv Bound makeapearc's Com- 2.50 each .......... ns, just as quickly af- kpril 2lst, as possible. EBWARDS. Rosewood Piano, $500 00 Bryan, value 225 00 iple Silver Plat- a. valued at $30 1m Gold Hunt- ,valued at 817 Spring Print from Petleyu’, 0 each Watchea 215t- Ladiu’ Journal rewardstby fafr given. THis is npetition of the ilver ed at val: Sil- ion No. 5, ilk' 8100 W 112 £60 00 14000 2750 7200 10000 180. 00 110 00 15D 00 1350 9700 90 00 9000 9000 8000 35 00 9750 8508 7500 9500 48m SWMRE} SMLES THE BEST, THE STRONGEST, THE mos-r RELIABLE RAILROAD, WAREHOUSE AND MILL TRUCKS Telephone communication with all parts of Ontario. Cm be consulted by telephone when desirable. S. EDW MCCULLY, M.D., MC.P.S.0., Mi‘ PS (2., Proprietor. M. HILTON WILLIAMS, MCP.S.0., 274, 276 & 278 Jarvis. cor. Gerrard, TORONTO. Established for the cure of consumption, Bronchitis, Cztarrh of Nose, Throat: and Lungs, Dyspepsia and Liver Complaint, Cancer, Scrofula, Diseases of Skin. Diseases of Eye. Ear, and Heart. Cancers and T11- mnrs dissolved by Electricity without the knife. Gilvanism and Faradism, in all their various forms scientifically applied to the treatment of Diseases of Women, nervous exhaustion. nervous debility and kindred diseases. Sand for our medical 1reatise and list of questions. GURNEYS 8c WARE, All correspondence must be addressed to D3. MGCULLY GURNEYS & WARE, From France 7 to America, Pulmonary Institute Ontar MONTREAL. T1131; ‘Tafg’e' ’a’ndi'NiCelfFinisheâ€"d store in_ ‘theVCenfrml Block. Waterloo, to rent-rent 6H: GUARANTEED PURE. . Price Low For Future Delivery, Copland 8câ€" McLaren, PARISGREfi money we know of. So if you don’t auc- ceed m obtaining a reward, you cannot fail to be pleased with your fifty cent In- veatment. Don’t target that thn. Teulflnrnnnnnl auburn-In, Mention this paper: 90 PER GENT OF ALL HORSES ield sn‘ raaer a: The sea )mmunic aditionâ€" 11 TO SA] 3]) LERE on ha 1!. All Bmlllonn Gunmnreed Erection. Home Free. Address. M. W. DUNIIA M. Wayne» Waggon Illinois. (35 mm west 01' Chlcato. on C. - .7- 7 , , u u...” “ (cu! amide, imxuéduité imssussiou. WILLIAM BNmEn quaLuArJuuv ‘HOiWEW‘Iâ€"DTâ€" Mills’ Alarm Money Drawers ind for price list 79.5 T‘ gonhaud Empofirug. 34 King St. East, Toronto‘ Address :y noth ting f0 ‘lebrated Elm City Harness Oil can be had from )wiug Wholemle Saddlery Hardware houses : r1 Davidson. Hamilton; Morgan Bros.Hamilcon: ml Johnson, Hamilton; 0. Davidson and 00.. ‘ S. Trees nnd 00,. Toronto' '1“ Woodhouse and onto; W‘ Ellis. London; W. 6. Martin. Kingston: 1 and Son. Branuord; or from F. F. DALLEY Hamilt Sole agents for the Dominion. ND FOR ILLUST}? ATT‘ED ONTARIO Welt; Toronto. EX 0 No strain on shoulder! or ants. rgquiresnDBU'l‘TONB 0N P TB Bunple, easy, cheap, durable. _ Sent to any address by mail on recelm of 50 or 759. with “ little Dorcas" 4â€" N. 111st and Co. .277 Kingfiu'ee. FISKE‘S ‘Gommun Sense' Brace rmplishmenc of the age. A railroad menus of Ming thong}:ch railroad by reason 0! its ex- A railroad by reason of its ease, Completae set w self instruction for beginners. post. free for for price_list t9 '1‘. 5K. MCINTYRE and 00., “mama uT KI { MILTON, ONT d1 Ever Imported HA3 IDOR'IID Liana] f ALL OTHERS Tt l is established by their IYeon in the Pemhe» u' of France. which Draft Horse Record 0! that country. Mr Dunn‘mlhnsjust “LL; 11 pti on m d a go. an wu fave rang â€" rent subacrip. :en ts. So ANDI- LIST. clar-

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