Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 29 May 1884, p. 3

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5' Poultry manure. “Professor Voelkor, ihe agricultural chemist to the Royal Agricultural Society of Eng. land, says in relation to poultry manure :â€" “ith regard to the application of poultry manure, the least expensive sud bus: way of using it is to mix is with dry earrhl ashes and such like into a composic. Mixed with about twice the quantiay of dry earthly matters of this kind, it Will Soon ha reduced into a. fairly dry and powdery state. in Which it may be readily sown lflruadcfilt 01' With the drill, and found very useful in growing every kind of garden vegesabloa. For root crops, such as turnips, carrots, manzels, &C., it should be mixed, after to- amhm m nnnwderv state. With an equsl growing every kind of garden vegesamea. For root crops, such as turnips, carrots, manzels, &C,, it should be mixed, after re- ducing to apowdery state, With an equsl weight of snperphosphate. and the mixture drilled in at the rate of 500 pounds to the acre. In making it into compost with earth, in my judgment, quicklime should never be mixed with it, for it! eflect would be to lib- erate the ammonia, the most of which would escape and be lost. 011 the other head, there is not only no harm, but a. poeltive advant- age, in mixing it with soot. 1n the absence of soot, the next best thing is to mix it With burnt plaster, to which a. small quantity of superphosphate is addedâ€"the free acid of which will efiectunlly prevent the escape of the ammonia. A mixture of two parts burnt plaster and one part Iuperphoephete may be Kept in readiness to mix Will: the fresh chicken dung for the purpose of absorbing the excess of moisture, and thus facilitateits being reduced to a dry and friable nature. Three puts of fresh chicken manure and one part of the preceding mixture of burnt plaster and auperphosphetel, if kept under cover for a. few days and turned once or twice during the time, and then passed through a. screen or sieve, will be found to be most eflicleioul when applied at the rate of from six to eight hundred pJunds be the MIC. A recent autopsy upon a. valunble horse at Bridgeport, Ct" revealed that death bud had been caused by piece: of zinc which he had chewed iron) the lining of his manger and swallowed. A correspondent of the Western Agricul- turist, says a teaspoonlul of anltpetre dis- solved in a gallon of water and the solution applied to the grape vines, will check the ravages of the rose bug. This remedy might be worth trying. Mention is made in foreign papers of a creafmery where each horse gets an allowance ,L “J n“. runnâ€" ....... , .V , , of buttermilk daily throughout the year. This system has been continued about twelve months and l‘found to answer in a. most satisfactory manner." l A correspondent of the Prairie Farmer says that in cutting up some dead and de- caying apple trees he dislodged scores of borers which had found lodgment in the trunks and roots, and is now convinced that such trees ought not to be left in the orchard to serve as breeding places for insects, but should be immediately consigned to ths fire. The English Government is seriously con. sidering tha cultivation of forests in Ireland. Mr. Howitz of Copenhagen, one of the high- est authorities on the subject, has visited Ireland, and studied its adaptability to forest cultivation, ant. pronounces it one of the most favorable countries in the world for the growth of timber. Professor E. M. Shelton, Farm Mmager of the Kansas Agricultural College, has handled three or four distinct breeds of swine, and studied them carefully during many years. When asked which is best: he admiti that he would be " sorely puzzled to tell.” Each has sterling pomts and counter- balancing weaknesses. A poultry fancier, v: ho believes in the value of ensilage for {owls during the winter, thinks it does not pay to construct silos to preserve it in. He uses old but tight mks, , liquor barrels. or molasses hogsheads. To keep their contents at the proper tempera.- tln'e he sinks them under ground. He finds that short clover, rye, and tender grass, like that cut from a. lawn, make the best ensilsge for fowls. ‘Msny papers have recommended testing garden and field seeds by placing them be- tween layers of damp cotton, and putting them in nsunny place in a room. This is not every severe test. Seeds not entirely lackingin vitality would germinate under such iavorable circumstances. They might not sprout, however, if they were placed in the soil where they are ordinarily planted, and it is possible that they would not pro- duce plants that would stand ordinary ex- posure if they did. L. A. Goodman, Secretary of the Missouri State Horticultural Society, thinks many peach trees injured by cold weather may be saved by acting on the rule thht the more the tree is injured the more it should be cut back. This should be done before the growth starts in spring. His argument in favor of this mode of treatment is. that a. peach tree with life enough left at the root to start the sap up the tree will recover, provided it he! only a short distance to send the sap through the diseased wood. 0n the other hand, if the sap had to flow to the tops of the trees it would circulate so slowly as to soon he choked by‘drying up. g Artichokes have been grown for swine several years at the Michigan agricultural college. The method of management has been to have a small patch of artichokes convenient to the swine-pens, upon which the breeding eOWs were turned in the spring, and allowed to harvest the roots for them- selves. Tne crop is thus grown with very little labor, since it requires no harvesting, Mums Aauul, sun-luv u. .-..1â€"..-â€" _- __~ 7"” o, the roots remaining in the ground sllwinter, and it furnishes succulent load for the sows just when it is most needed, and most diffi- cult to obtain from other sources. Prof. Johnson, the farm su srinmndent, is so well pleased with the resu t of this management that. he is enluging the artichoke plunke- tion. Profit in sheep husbandry menu the most generous and Judicionl feeding and care, carried out in every part at the ayltem. When this is done, so far from shoe being unprofitable upon our higher pricagJ lands, it is doubtful if any other animal pnyn so well. In En land, it bu been said that, on land: worth 300 to .500 per acre. fertility can be more profitably kept up with sheep than any other stock. Deity flock, for insttnoe, carry of? much more in the milk AGRICULTURAL. AGRICULTURAL ITEMS. The Care of Sleep. nlone than sheep in all ways. besides taking gs much to build the bones and grow their bodies. The waste of phosphates is much morerapid in dairying than sheep husbandry. It, then, sheep may be fed to profit in Eng- land on land worth “00 per acre, we should not be deterred from sheep feeding on lands worth $50 to $150 per acre. England is considered peculiarly s beef-eating country ; but yet the best mutton brings a higher price than beef. Our large cities .nrl manu- facturing towns are constantly increasing their demands for good mutton, and this de- mand is likely to increase as fast as the pro- duction. If we should lead as large a. number of sheep per hundred acres in the Middle and Eastern States as does Great Britain, the desire for emigration from these States to more fertile lands of the West would soon of sheep per hundred acres and Eastern States a does the desire for emigration fro to more fertile lands of the V cease. And so, year after year. he wrought l among the boys on a morning paper. He 1 went to bed about the time the rest of the | world got up, and he arose about the time the rest of the world set. down to dinner. He worked by every kind 0! light except sunlight. There were candles in the office when he csme in; then they had lard oil lamps that smoked and spluttered and smelled ; then he saw two or three printers blinded by explosions of osmphene md spirit gas, then kerosene one in sud hosted up the newsroom on summer nights like a. {urnsce ; then the office put in gas. and now the electric light swung from the ceiling and dazzled his old e es, and glared into them from his eopy. he sang on his way home a policeman bade him " cheese that.” and reminded him that he was disturbhg the peace and people wsnted to sleep. But when he wanted to sleep the rest of the world, for whom he had set up :11 night to mske a morning paper. roared and crashed by down the noisy streets under his window, with cart and truck end omnibus; blued with brass bands, howled with hand-organs, talk- ed and shouted ; and even the shrieking nowabovs, with a ghastly sarcasm, murdered the sleep at 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 have 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; long-winded correspondents learn- ing to write, and long-haired cats who could never learn to spell, wrat fully cast all their imperfections npon 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 foreman and pressmen and re- porters came and went, but he stayed, and I __ ,An"... RII_.I “at! EVA “0., v-...- w- he 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 pity1 121.1%“an as near being contempt 1. | A ,AMI; ‘__| auqu kuu’, nun... u-.." .... “v... m..- as his good, forgivmg old heart could for an editor who had not worked his way from a regular devilship up past the cues and the iurupqaigg ptone: _ “ He workgtilrallathat night, and when the hour: that are so short in the ball-room and so lopg in the_co!nposing-room drew wearily u A. :4 on, h: was tired. He hadn’t thrown in a. very full case. he said, and he had to climb clear into the boxes and chase a type into a. corner before he could get hold of it. One of the boys, tired as himselfâ€"hut a printer is never too tired to be good-naturedâ€"ofl'er- ed to change placel with him, but the old man said there was enough In the cue to last him through this take, and he wouldn’t work any more to-night. The type clicked in the silent room, and by and by the old man said : How the Old Printer Pass“! Away. " I'm out of sorts." And he sat down on the low window sill by his 09.58, with his stick in his hand, his hands folded wearin in his lap. The types clicked on. A gapey of. telegraph waited. n “ What gentle‘man is lingermg with D 13 7” called the foreman, who was always dangerously polished and polite when he was on the point of exploding with wrath and impptience. 1 .n ,n,4 ,L____U1 *ISrlâ€"JéVi‘Iâ€"Lge, passing by the alley, stopped to speak to the old man sitting there so quietly. _ ‘ . , _,___:.‘_ :_ _â€":LL ‘1‘”‘"J ' The telegraph boy came running in with the lust manifold sheet, shouting: “ Thirty I" They carried the old man to the foremnn'a long table and laid him down reverently and covered his face. They took the stick on]: of his nervelesa hand, and read his last ta. 8 : BOSTON, November 23.â€"The American bark Pilgrim went to pieces of? Merblehead in a. light gale about mldniqht. She was old and unaeawortby and this was to have been her last tripâ€"H’awkeye. 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, Enortgage companies $125,000,000 ; and the Economist estimates the British deposits in Australian banks at nearly $60,000,000. There was a. belance against these colonies on the trade with England of $35,000,000, last two years, during which the total balance due to Eng- land. under every head, was about 8100,- 000,000. But the amount raised in England on Australian account, last year, was more than this. perthI $10,000,000 more. \Vhat might have been expected to happen, did lllppen. England having more to send to Australia. then to receive therefrom, ship- ped something like $1,600,000 in gold. The reserves of the Auntmlien banks recently sank low. these of Victoria. and New Soutn being 2 Si in the pound ; and the banks have been trying in vain to inoreue them. Australia will have to slncken her swift rate of borrowing in future. “ I think crime is on the increase,” ob- served one dude to another in he went in to no the bench show. “Why?” asked hil compmion. “Everybody seems to be going to the dogs ;" and he therefore made up hxs min’d that be was born to be a pmgrapher. Not another Pill shall go down my throat again. said a citizen. "when I can get such a prompt and plenaaut cure for my Bilious attacks. such as Dr. Canon's Stom- ach Bitters. It renders the Blood Pure and 0001 and maléea a aplendxd Spring Medicine. large bottles 50 can a. Mr. Ttylor, who oslled Mr. Cnmmnok a MA: at the Windaor Hotal hat week, the New York pl on my "had been dining:"’ After I Now ork Inn bu "dined" he maps to be very fevorish. Australia as a Borrower. The Dreadnu Punishment 0! a. Ins-deter in Russia. Mszof had murdered a man. a woman and a little boy. Before the Magistrate he made elfnll confesion of his guilt. A determined attempt was made by the soldiers to mob him while he was making this confession but it was repressed. He was reserved for a much more terrible punishment than that accorded by lynch law. He wa aentenced to 399 lashes with the knout, which meant to be knouted to dash, unless-3 he possessed superhuman endurance. He was marcheJ cat to punishment in company With two forgers, all St. Peters- burg turning out to Witness the spectacle. This horrible show is thus graphically de- scribed by the old chonicle : grooves at the top and two rmgl near the bottom ; the middle groove was for the neck. and the two others {or the armpits, the ring: below to look around the ankles ; about the stakes were laid course skins, especially where the knoutâ€"meeter trod, upon which ley his whips, muting irons, pincere, etc. An oflioer then read a paper to the people, signifying the: forgery upon the Imperial bunk being a cnpitel crime. and two of the prieonere convicted of it , weree condemned to receive eleven blown with the lmout, t) have their noetrile pulled out, end be ban- ished for life to Siberm ; the murderer of so many pereonl to receive 399 blows, to be branded three times in the face, have his noetrile ulled out, and (i! then alive) be bani-he for life to the mmel of Siberia. 7 “The fiake prepared for him wan a strong block of wood fixed in the ground with thrpe "The executioner sud his assistants then stripped him, tied his hands across, and led him mthe post. After fixing his ankles they bent his neck and arms over it, and drew the rope with which his hands were tied through the ring on the opposite side, which seemed to stretch all the muscles of the back. 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 elssticity. Walking towards the prisoner with four or five steady steps, then taking a spring he struck a perpendicular stroke with a. heavy, loud crnc . The first stroke cut from the right side of the bottom of the neck to the left armpit. The effect wee vis- ible in a. moment. end by the violence of his screams afforded reason to suppose that the pain was very great. The second was about 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 alter- ‘ ward quite perpendicular. Toe strokes were ‘ given with the great Ht regularity. Between each s person might deliberntsly count eight the exacuzioner always walking slowly t) and from the stske. “ His cries were now so terrible that some of the spectators were obliged to turn their bucks end put their fingers in their ears. All was quiet and silent, and the crack 0! the knout was heard a great distance. After receiving three hundred lashes the culprn’s voice grew faint, and during the last one hundred he showed no signs of lile whatever, the whole of the upper part of the hack being beaten to a black mummy. After the 13.33 blow the asstetants lifted up the 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 gristls of his nose, 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 suflioiently to be able to make some ‘ reparation to society by working in the iron mines.“ There are lots of people going around grumbling, and half slck at the Stomach all the time; who might. be well and happy. if the only need Dr. Carson's Stomach Bitters occasionally. c in a. splendid Blood Purifier All Druggiaza 50 cents. Faith without works is good for nathing when it comes to a elock. Failure Impossible When Polson'a 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 great. pain cure. does its work promptly. Buy 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 drugglsts. A'single female lobster has from 20.000 to 30.000 eggsâ€"as nearly as possible the same as the female salmon. The success with which the Triangle Dyes have met proves them the most remarkable Dyes of the past or present. They are at- tracting attention from all classes of society, 100. I {Louisiana has school accommodations for but 75,000 children, th0ugh there are at least 250,000 little ones in the State. No Dllappolntment. Diseppointments of one kind or another crop up all along life's pathway. for unfor- tunately it is the unexpected that always happens. There is at least one article of acknowledged meritflthst 'never disappoints. Putnam's i’ainlcss Corn Extractor is sure to remove the worst coma in a. few days, and as no claim is made that it will cure anything elss, it cannot disappoint. If you have hard or soft corns just tr it. Beware of the article “ just as good.’ N. C. Poison & Co., proprietors, Kingston. A. P 179 11 7 (SEESEEION South Wast of Toronto ahd Sydenham Road. Holland; mill site thereon. For particulars apply Box 136. Newmarket. ULOUR AND SAW MILLS FOR SALE _ D at Lakeside, county Oxford; brick building 40 x 50: 2} storeys high, coutuininl three pair mill stones and ell necessary mncninery for flouring and custom work : 33w will 35 x 60, capable of cutting 5,000 to 10.0001eot per day; all driven by new 50-hour: power Bucke a automatic cut-0t! engine; 35 Acres land, house, stab e drlva-barn. 300d huh. orchard; sheds Ind atabllng for farmers' teams ; price $3.000; terms, $5,000 cash. bnlanca on mort- gagE. G. DALayMPLn. Lakeside. CIE‘ WHAT SHALL I DRINK! Cordial, most wbulvsomv, dellcious flflll refreshing bevera e Strictly pure and entirely free from Alcohol. Uold udalOalcunu Exlnbltiun. Solllhy all «lmgglats and grace-u. Sole proprietors H. BUGDEN EVANS a 00, Montreal. Agents, JAS. H. PEARCE & Co. Toruntu. SllllKEDSAUSAGES. Lime Fruit Juice. The most convenlent me“. for Isl-mars in their busy lenuon. These menu are cooked and read (or use. Sold 13 grocers thrth tha Dominion. Ben to: price w W. K. P. 0. Box 342. Momma]. THE TERRIBLE KNOUT. ,OTs’FbRsALEâ€"‘zs AND 29, let. CON- Tu HONTSEBRAT $250 l. patented. approaches nearer the old method of hard rubbing than any device yet introduced to the public. Easily worked. and washes perfectly clean. without, breaking buttons. or injury to the clothes. Descri tive circularanmajled free. Price. 85. J. H. CONNOR. an. & Gentlemen. Apply hnmehintely. B. N CURRY, Jr.P,.rSec‘-'l‘reaa‘. London. Ont. Agents wunbed kleek nraln The celebrated Elm ( the following Whales: Field sud Davidson. g2 E mxfim arm. Leather Belting ! 10 King Street, East, Toronto. Large double Drivin Belts 3. avecialty. bend or Price Liam and Discounts. Mutual Marriage Endowment As‘n, Issues Certificates from $125 to 83,011). psyable on mu- riuqo as following rates. For $500. or ball Certificate. $4 quarterly duesln nd‘ â€"HEAD OFFICE. LONDON. ONT.â€" WAN. A percenta e o! the Fees applied tawnrds a re serve Fund. he only cash payments required at the time of making application for n certificate. The re- mainder of the liability is made up of assessments at. the rate of 81.60 on each $1,000 upon the marriage of mem- bers, 12 assessments made the first year payable qunr- terly. which upon the present large membership secures the payment of a number of Endowments and a sale and reliable investment for young peo 1e. and for By- Laws. and full particulars to W. . CH. Secretary, London. Ont. (Members of Buy and sellhqn uu, u...“ .. gin a_11 secuntlesiinE'ifin 6n the Toronto, Mon- ii'eal. ind Maw “:15 MPROVED WASHING “MACEIyE! Dominion Line of Steamshjps Running in connectmn with the Grand Trunk Railway of Canada. Sailing from uebec every Saturda during the summer mom: 9 and from Portlan every Thursday during tile winter mon tbs. Montreal, May. l0. ‘Vanconver, May. 3|. *Rarnla, May. 17. Toronto. June. '1. Brooklyn. May. 24. ' Oregon. June. 14. Rates of passage : Cabin. Quebec to Liver 00: $50. $60. $65. 880; return $90.$108.8117, Ill. according to steamer and berth. Intermediate. $40. Steersge. at lowest rates. The saloons and staterooms ln steamers marked thus: " are amldshlps. where but little motion is felt. and no cattle or sheep are carried on them. For further psrtlcnlsrs apply to any Grand Trunk Railway Agent or local agents of the Com puny. or to TUitfiA DDLERS. Alao execute orders on the Chicago Board f'l‘rade. â€"IN GRAIN AND PROVISIONS.â€" Carriage Repository} We make aspechflty of American made Car- riages. and have a. larger stock to select from than any House in Canada. Chas. Brown & 00., 6 ADELAIDE ST., E. Toronto Weighs but 6 pounds. Can be carried in a small “lino. Illustration shown Machine in boiler. Satisfaction unplanned 9!_ may refunded. a~~-- v- â€"vâ€"~. --â€"â€"â€"~~. $l.000.00 REWARD FOB'I'I‘S SUPERIOR. Washing made light and easy. The clothes have that. pure whiteness which no other mode of washing can pro- duce. No rubbing required, no friction to injure the fabric. A 10 year old girl can do the weshing as well as sn older person. «m 3:1 T: I- ' To place it in every household THE PRICE HAS BEEN REDUCED to 32.50, and if not found satisfactory. money refunded. See what the “ Csnada Presbyterian" says about it.â€"â€"â€"The Model Washer Ind Bleacher which Mr. O. W. Dennis oflers to the public has sunny and valuable advantages. It is a time and laborâ€"saving machine. is substantial and enduring, and is very cheap. From trial in the household we can testify to its excellence." De- livered to any express office in the Provinces of Ontario and Quebec. Charges paid 83.00- Send for circulars Hill. Ont C. W. DENNIS, celebrated Elm City Harness Oil can be had frvm Mowing Wholesale Badmery Hardware houses ; and Davidson. Hamilton; Morgnn Bros,Hnmilton; and Johnson. Hamilton; C. Davidson and Co. :0; EL Trees and 00.. Toronto- T. Woodhouse an ammo; W. Ellis, London; W. (3. Martin, Kingswn: ch and Son, Brsuttord; or rom F. F. DALLEY 1.. Hamilton, Sole wants or the Dominion. 81.000 Certiflcnbg $2,000 Certificate $3,000 Certificate‘ 'S‘jib‘ék‘EXCHANGES, 7 Importers “1'”!- Wm“? 213 YOVGE STREET ITORONTOJ 1006 WHe & Co. American Carriage Repositoryfl Manufucluren of Star Rivet MERIDEN BRITANNIA (39:3 6 TORONTO STREET. T‘DRONTC’ v New York, Meriden (CL), Chicago, San Francisco, London, (E'ngJ. BRANCH FACTORYâ€"Cor. Cannon and Wellington Streets. Hamilton, Ont. fiimt @T'Itttru @1111 and gum Elm,- TORONTO BARGAINRHOUSEJ to $4.000 on mgr-ring. _IAdies hey Nyn Styeet._Mout1-eal. AGENTS WANTED. STOCK BROKERS DAVID TORRANC‘E a C0" General Agents. Montreal. QUEBEQ To_ LIVERPOOL THE AMERICAN INCORPORATED‘ the Toronto Stock Exchange) commission forgash 01“ in_r_nar l'v'a- r rm . _ _ ed. See the big list 0! book: ; iveu FREE to each yearly aub‘ criber and clubber. S.FRA.NK WILSON, 33 t 35 Adelaide BL. West.aToronto. Gland». $6; quarterly dues in advance $10 qualterly duel! In advance quarterly dues in advmce Cement, Chimney (Inga, Water Lima, Flu» aster of Paris, Fire Clay. BLEACHER, Washer Many purchasers having through A similarity or names purchased other wares under the impression that fine were of our manufacture, we are compel - 299253 sowiamwmiw 90 P112 9‘10"! TRADE MARKS. Tho fact that our nuns and Trade Marks are being so 01059 1, imitated. should he a. sufficient. guaran- o_ur wares are the iiiéi'fir'i‘iiii WEEK). 1 HE MUDEL _:) MANUFACTURERS 0F (:â€"- AND ‘e publish- ot book: PARIS GREEN GUARANTEED PURE. Price Law For Future Delivary. Copland 8â€"6_ McLaren, MONTREAL. REINHARDT and Mnusmch dress 1 Toront DEATH TO POTATO BUGS. ASK YOUR LOCAL DEALER FOR RAMSAY’S PURE PARIS GREEN. Nothing has been found more effective for destroying Potato Bugs. The purest is the cheapest. A. Ramsay & Son, la a perfect em. equal to an Imported French Corset: fits iko a u ovebo the figure; very styl- ish, elegant in a penance, and approved of by the moat tasti ions. Manufactured only by inn cnommoN coRSET co. â€" FOR THE â€"â€" Gitizens Insurance [10,. of Uanada. As the Company transacts Fire, Life, and. Accident business a profitable agency is thus offered t9 those soigcinng .ins‘umnce risks. is _,14-‘_u- _-_ HALO-w w yum“. -V. Special terms to thouâ€"(R:th hare valuable con- nections. Farm property insured as low as by Farm Mutuals. EMARWEEAID 7 Kddress, [lead Office. 179 St. James Street, Montreal. arThe stnck of this Company is held by many of the wealthiest citizens of Montreal. rit £113.11 Lina Royal Man Steamships. 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- (louderry to land mails and passengers for Scotland and. Ireland. Also from Baltimore via Halifax and St J ohn's N. F, to Liverpool iortnightly during summer months. The steamers o the Glasgow lines sail during winter between Portlan and Glasgow, and Boston and Glasgow alternately: and during summer between Quebec and Glgsgowynfl Boston and Glasgow every week. ,,,_4 __ nu.-- :_aAâ€"nnun- ulnnsuvv mm "WW- -.._ -._..,-.. Viv, For freight, pass a. or other information apply to A. Schumac er &Co.. Baltimore; S. Cunard Sc 00., Halifax ; Shea. 82 Co, St. John's, N. F. ; Wm. Thomson 8:. Co., St. John, N. 3.; Allan & Co. Onion 0; Love 61. Alden. New Yolk: H. Bourlier. oronto; Allans. Rae 8100., Quepec; H. A. Allan. Portland. Boston. Mon- L‘real. Ofler $100,000 Paid in Benefits to Date. A 7 ISSUE IN 183's} ’nvsn .$2.0.Uuzqgu. Agentsfihnted Paint and Color Mgnutacturers, Mogtteal. Agents Wanted Established neviâ€"Capital. and Assets, 81.436335. Government Deposit $122,000 Cash‘ The m1ng Premiums small. Address WARE, which WANMRD SCALES. THE BEST, THE STRONGEST, THE MOST RELIABLE- RAILROAD, WAREHOUSE AND m5 TRUCKS 5 '000 PAID 0N MARRIAGES. GURNEYS 8c WARE THEY EXCEL ALL OTHERS. urnfi’fifLy 'nrivn 78 VORK STREET. TORONTO- 'I’JR”1")’6”I”J’B“TEH'SECUMTY. ASSOCIATION. Mills’ Alarm Money Drawers; SEND FOB ILLUSTRATED PRICE LIS'I. .lled give cntx‘ m Canada that hés'paid a claim ml’Y “man nuns-1n n material. construction nnq finish, per :y and unequalled in durablhty. Gnu- cm’n-e satisfaction. ante [IA HILToN. ONT S HAIR RESTORER 3 Producer, A genuine prepara- .nteed to do all chm. is claimed nuriant whiskers sud moustache onlcs safely packed to any ad REINHARDT. Mail Building. 1847 Rogers Bros. Al. W. B. WEBBER. Secretary. Hamilton GL 03E Walter Woods 84,000 Sold in 17 Months! TRADE HAMILTON 0A MARK. BUY ONLY THE

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