Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 7 Aug 1884, p. 3

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agonized breath to the period of cheerful convalescence. Every face in these eighty- four, male and female, was the face of a. person from the lower walks of life, and this I am told has been the lule amcng ratimts a. hospital it is (our of the room in all stages of agonized bre nth The repast ended, we undertook a. drive through the city. In the chief streets we could discern but slight changes. In the Rue St. Ferreol, a lroad and prominent street in the main part of the town, only four shops were closed; in the Rue de la Cannebiere, in which are situated all the finest shops and business laces of other kinds, only nine were cl \d. But the poorer quartersâ€"and God knows there are enough of themâ€"revealed sno\her side to the picture as we drove into them. Passing along the narrow and squalid Rue Caisserie, over one-half the shops were seen to he clos- ed at every crossing. From a tencment region on the hll] above a stream of fuctid water flowed across the street and plunged down a precipitous descent on the other side through dark lanes crowded with towering rookeries swarming below with idle men and children playing in the filthy gutters, the women meanwhile swashing the water about with their brooms under the evident im- ression that they were cleaning something. inally we got on a street known as Toulon roadâ€"a wide thoroughfare without a shade tree. Along its gutters ran rivulets of drab~ colored water which had overflown from the canal when the canal was dammed now and then by heaps of rotten vegetables or worse substances, including dead cats and dogs. Four out of every five houses were found closed. Those which remained open Were mainly estamineta, where, under dirty awnings and on dirty sidewalks, men and women sat drinking or were already re- duced to stupor from previous drinking, and junk shops in which filthy people were sorting rotten rags in an unspeakably vile at- mosphere. Fostering filth was around them, and a. tropical sun beat fiercely down upon the scene, blinding the eyes as its rays were reflected from the white road across which, in the Quartier Capalette, courses a stream about the size of a main sewer in New York, winding its way uncovered among the houses on its journey to the sea. This stream was laden with the sewage of the vilest of the Marseilles quartersâ€"Cap;- lette and the adjoining oreâ€"which have furnished much over one-half of the deaths that have occurred in Marseilles, and it is an interesting fact that the largest propor- tion of them were Italians. The wharves all along the water front we found to be crowd- ed with the quarantine shipping, mostly Italian and French, and picturesque sights were these Mediterranean sailors, among whom were many negroes lying in the shade. THE PHARO HOSPITAL. After this experience I decided to visit the hospital. The authorities objected to my entrance at the Pharo, and there was much difficulty in getting over their objec- tions. Fortunately I had a note from a Paris physiolan to Dr. Queviel, the Presi~ dent of the Medical Society, and a letter from Dr. Queviel finally availed to secure me admissmn. A young English physician named Paul Bossano was my amiable escort through the wards of the building. 110W called the Hopital Auxiliare de l’haro. This is a magnificent structure externally. In was erected by the Municipality for the late Emperor Napofoen ill, and was still unfinished when Sedan changed all the olans and the work was then stopped. As a palace the structure is a superb the. but as a hospital it is badly arranged. Dru-mg a tour of the rocm. I saw eighty-four patirutg in all stages of the disease, from the lost AT MARSEILLES. 0n the first View that one gets of Mar- seilles no one would be apt to suspect, either from the appearance of the city itself or of the people he could see, that a pestil- ence had seized the town. It was estimated at the time of my arrival that fully 100,000 people had already left the city ; but their absence was scarcely noticeable from the ap- pearance of the streets. In one of the public squares a band of Italian musicians were playing to a throng of children and grown persons. The omnibuses and street cars were full of people as in ordinary times, while on the sidewalks, under the cafe awn- ings, nearly all the chairs were occupied, and the waiters were kept as busy as ever by the cheerful crowd of loungers. But at the sumptuous Hotel Noailles, on the Rue de Noajlles, a. continuation of the famous Canuebiere, a different scene was observed. In all its hundred rooms, myself and my courier were the only guests to be seen. I todk the night train for Marseilles, and arose for breakfast at 6 o'clock in the mom- ing at Valence. some fifty miles south of Lyons, and watched the country carefully for signs of anxiety or commotion, but saw nothing unusual until Arles was reached. Here every Window of the Spanish-looking houses was closed, so far as I could observe them, and in the streets of this town of 25.- 000 people not a. soul was to be seen. At the depot was congregated a. melancholy crowd of poor people, the most of whom had bundles of clothing and various domestic articlcs tried up by means of bedclothes. They were waiting for the omnibus trainâ€"a train belonging to the third-class and rule» cellaneons in its characterâ€"that should carry them northward to Tarascon, which is in the same department as Arles, and to Beaucaire, on the opposite bank of the Rhone from Tarascon. During the day and night there had been thirteen deaths, and a fearful panic had prevailed in spite of the Archbishop's formal procession to the relics of the saints in the Clthedral of St. Tro- phimus. Graphic Description From Stricken Mar- seilles and Toulon. (Correspondence New York Times ) I have made a. five days' visit to this city, to Toulon. and to Arles, in order to learn and report for American readers some facts and scenes in regard to the cholera. I have visited every loom in every cholera hospital existing in Marseilles and Toulon, and have seen the wretched people dying in hospitals and in their own hovels, and buried at mid- night in the Cemeteries by the light of torches and lanterns. I have discussed all the phases of the epidemic exhaustively with the hospital doctors. with prlests, and with nurses, and my conclusion is that the muclLdreaded cholera, probably the most fatal and severe of all diseases to which hu- man flesh is heir, is a thing of which no intelligent community of well~ordered lives and well-managed sewer pipes need have an alarming tear, even when brought into cloge contact with it, to say nothing of getting into a panic at a. distance: 1: -n I THE SEAT OF THE CHOLERA 1 saw e1 the disea to the I Every tau female, last chased by Rev. Mr. Bull’s grandfatbe‘rraZt the public auction of Wesley's personal ef- fects after his deathâ€"Philadelphia. Chron- icle Herafd. Rev. D. W. Bull, of Tmnsfer, Mercer Co. has some interasbing relics of John Wesley. the fouder of Methodism. They consist of a, Royal Arch Masonic apron, receipts of lodge dues paid by Wesley to the lodge of which he was a. member, extending overa. period of some fifteen years, and a. number of books from VVesley‘s private library, con« taining his autogragh. The Masonic apron is 153 years old. These relics Vero pur. As no Englishqpeaking journalist has this season been before me in this portion of southern France. though the condition of aflairs is bad enough, the reports of panic and turbulence sent to English and Ameri- can newspapers. I think, have been grossly exaggerated. I stopped over one train at Toulon during my investigation and then went again to Arlee, but had no time to visit the hospital there. I found no one who could give me any intelligible account of afl'airs. An old priest with whom I talked expressed him- self in no measured terms in regard to what he called “the cowardice of the people.” He said Arlee was deserted and so panic- strioken that the dead in some cases xemain- ed unburied. Toulou streets and shops displayed no thing of their former hustle and activity. There were some few signs of life only in the two streets of La Rapublique and La Fayette. Here the shops were open, but elsewhere they were closed. No business seemed to be the rule, and a vitlt paid to the outlyin sections of Toulon showed how the dreads disease had made the streets is solitude I visited a hospital in the suburbs constructed in that unfortunate way so much in vogue a century or more ago. It has been receiving cholera patients since the 14th ofJuly. I saw there thirty-six cases of chol- era. HereI saw Mme. Dorvan. a lady of wealth Whose name has already been cele~ brated for her devotion to the cause of hu- manity. This brave woman has nursed cholera patients in Egypt, Greece, and Italy. I found her in this hospital busily occupied, moving from bed to bed, administering to the wants of the sick. In a. conversation with her in regard to the contagious char- acter of cholera, Mme. Darvau agreed with the doctors that under proper precautions the elements of danger were singularly les- sened. I noticed that the doctors smoked cigars and chewed considerable quantities of camphor. if, in a. sanitary sense, the condition of Marseilles was frightful, that of Toulon struck me as simply murderous. Toulon has always been a breeding place of disease. Smallpox when it broke out in Toulon was always of a. maligusnt type, and more difli cult to stamp out than elsewhere. The natural death rate is invariably high, and likely to be increased at any time by abnor mal diseases. The treatment both here and at Toulon, in the first stages, is twenty drops of lau- danum, with three grains of ether, and ice in the mouth to stop the vomiting. In the sc cond stage the patients become very cold. From ten to fifteen grammes of acetate am- monia, the same quantity of alcohol, and two injections of morphia are given daily. If the patient cannot breath, artificial re- spiration of oxygen is produced, and the limbs are rubbed with turpentine. The third stage is the coffin. ’ MIDNIGHT AT THE CEMETERY. Late at night I drove, with my courier, outside the city to the cemetery, St. Pierre, to see the burial of the three atients whom I had observed in the Pharo capital in the afternoon. The route led through the poor quarter, and at every corner bonfires were blazing to purify the air. The whole popula- tion was sitting out on the steps of tenements or on church porches, enjoying the fires and the currents of air created by them. After a brief burial service, intcned by a pale young priest, who looked badly soared, three boxes were hurriedly lowered into a trench eight feet deep by twenty feet long, and a goodly quantity of lime was shovelled on top, A concierge showed me a burial permit. Across the face of the document was written, " Choleraâ€"~urgent," and there was a requisition for some disinfectant. I went baton to the central part of the city, and it was gay enough. Bands were playing and cafe lamps were gleaming. People in throngs were walking in the streets. laugh- ing merrily. and many heads were poked out of the windows of the houses. AT TOULON. My visit to Toulon was necessary in order to show me more plainly what Were the effects of the epidemic. The country people seemed to have lost their wits. The stations along the road have been deserted save by the railway officials. As at Arlee and every where else where there was a stopping place, piles of baggage, bedding, and house- hold furniture encumbered the platforms. At the Boulevard de Lesse, near the station at Toulon, I saw no human being save one cabman, who was sound asleep beneath the shadow of a huge umbrella. I awakened him and hired him. I started at once for an in- spection of the town. Not until I had reached the Place d’Armes did I see a soul. Tne Place d‘Armes is the usual resort and lounging place of many sailors, for Toulon .is a huge marine barracks, where at times there are as many as 12,000 sailors. Now I only saw two or three men seated on the benches. The larger portion of the sailors, with the soldiers, have been sent away, and are now quartered on the high ground which surrounds the port. Still two-thirds of the men I came across were either soldiers or sailors. The surgeons in the service and the Sous-Prefet estimate the people in the town to be to-day about 25,000. from the first. At the beginning nineteen- twentieths of the patients received at the Pharo failed to recover. For the last {ort- mfiht matters have so far im roved that on two-thirds of those receive have died. This excessive mortality at first was largely due to the fact that moet cases when receiv- ed had developed into a hopeless condition. The highest number that have been in the hospitll at any one time is 110, and the largest number received in any one da is 37. There are two chief doctors and our subordinates. who serve in turns. There are besides two epothecaries, ten Augustin- ien Sisters, and a large force of laborers. All 0‘ these people, except the two chiefs, will be obliged to remain in the hospital constantly until November, having been forbidden to go out into the city. One Siifier has already died here. Rev. John Wesiey a Mason. N<->>M s.â€"Whet evidence have we that in Biblfi time! women were often e played in the menu- tactnre of breed and sweet eats! 6.â€"0ne Lady's Hunting-cue Watch Stem-windingand Sum-Setting” 96 an 7 to 12-â€"Six beautiful heavy black corded Silk Dress Patterns . . . . . . . . 309 m 13 to 18.â€"l"ive celebrated Willisins’ Sin- ger Sewing Meohines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325 m 19 to zitâ€"Eight Solid Coin Silver Hunt- ing~cese Watches . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 168 00 21 to Sitâ€"Four quadruple- lated Silver leted Teapots letes designs. . .. 50 00 3i to i.â€"mievaoiia Coin Silver Hunt- ing-case Wstehes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 231 00 42 towâ€"Eighteen Solid chle Silver Watches kinetic-in Movement- 27000 60m111.â€"-Fi{ty-twq volumes Lnnm~ bers’ Etymological Dictionary... 156 00 112 to 359..â€"-l‘wo hundred and forty- seven Ledies' Solid Rolled Gold Brooches. new and eleven: de- signs . . , . . . . . . . . . . .... . . . . . . . . 494 ()0 360 to 505.~~0ne hundr nd forty-five Silver-plated Butter Knives . . . . . , 145 00 Theee five acres of land above described wi 1 be given to the person sending the mlddle vor- rect answer of the Whole Competition. from first to last. The five hundred and four coatly articles. beginning with the piano. that follow No. 1 of the middle rewards will be given to the live hundred and four persons who send the next correct answers following the middle or centre reward that takes the farm. The land mentioned above could be divided into bulldim; lots and sold to a. great advantage. as there ixl'c no vacant houses in the town e Cliiton or Ni- agara, Fells. as itie now called, Then, that z.â€"Wha.t i; the ahfierfldll arâ€"o}: tn oubita or square feet of the largest belatead mentioned in the Bible! ‘ L FIVE ACRES OFBEAUTIFULLI SITUAle LAND, adJo'Lnlng the corporation of Nlenn Felll. tree from allincumbranoa. clear title. splendidly situated for fruit rus- lng, Blopln gently towards the south, over coking the town, And within sound Lt the gran: cataract- not a slump or en uneven foot of ground in it; land on oppoalte elde of road held at .me per Acre .. 2.â€"0ne Baum-.1 nere Grand Rose- wood Plum. by gzeveneen 5; Co.. &â€"0-e Ell-gun Cabinet 0 an. by the celebrated firm of Bell 00 . . . . . . 4.â€"0ne Beautiful Silver '16: Service best made. quadruple plate. six pieces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (Ine Gentleman's Genuine Elzin Watch, Stem-winding and Stem- Bettl-g, h. o . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . “9330000 55090 25000 10000 10000 1.â€"Where is the first reference in the Bible to th_e d9!" belng dlvlded ingohgun‘l 1 and 2.â€"Two Elegant Grand Squre Rosewood Pianos, by the oelebret- ed makers. Stevenson 85 Co . . . . . . 31.1% (I) 8,â€"Une celebrated “Bell” Urgen. the finest organ makers in Canada. .. 850 00 hâ€"One beautiful quadruple-pleted Silver Tea Set . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 00 5.â€"0ne Gentleman's Genuine Elgin Stem winding and Stem-setting. latest style. Solid Gold. Hunting Case Wuch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 00 6.â€"-One Lady’s Solid Gold Hunting Cute Genuine Elzin Wutah. latest style . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 06 00 7 to 16,â€"Ten renowned Williams' Sin- ger Sewing Machines . . . . . . . . . . . . 660 00 17 to 26.â€"Ten (gentleman's beautiful Solid Coin Silver Hunting-cue Watches . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . no 00 27t031.â€"Five Ladies’ beautiful Solid Coin Silver Hunting-case Watches 106 00 32 to 5l.â€"Twenty Waterbury Wstches mo 00 52 to lOS.â€"l"ifty-two volumes Univer sul Cyclopedia. An excellent work . . . . . . ......... . . . . . . . . 166 no 104 to Zinâ€"Ninet -seven Ledies' Besu titul Solid oiled Gold Brooches latest style patterns, splendid value . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19¢ 00 201 to 252.â€"Fi!ty-two Elegant Triple- plated Butter Knives . . . . . . . . . . . . 62 00 The above magnificent list or swerds will be given to the iirst two hundred and nty-two per- sons who send correct answers to each 0: the three Bible questions given above. Then tol- lows the big list of At the solicitation of many friendl TRUTH announces one moreâ€"the finalâ€"Bible competi- tion. Owing to the fact ofso many valuable rewards going to citizens of Toronto, this com- petition will be open only to persons living out- side the city of Toronto. Aug one relidin in lny other part of the habita 10 world wil be eligible to compete for these magnificent reâ€" vverde. The lrlneetionsâ€"whioh are supplied by In eminent mbyterian ministerâ€"ere very diflicult, but the rewards are valuable. Every- thing offered in revioua compe' itiona has been promptly and c eertully handed over to the successful ones the moment they are known. Full and complete lists of all those who finin re- wards are given in TRUTH the week to owing the close of each competition. There will be no change, and no postponement in any way; everything will he carried out exactly as stated. \ Every one competing must send one dollar with their answers, for six months' unbacri tion toTnUTH. And aside from the rewardn. 2 cm- aelvee, they willflnd that they have and. the hést investment of one dollar they ever did. TRUTH is full and biz value for the money. Bean-In mind that you pay nothing extra for the privilege of competing for those costly town-din. and you will get TRUTH for nix moathl in any one for your one dollar which in the regular sublcription price, ml will else get one of these rewards. provided your answers are correct. and reach TRUTH mile. in time D2”"'.3913y- Foul- Pianos. Three Organs. Sllvnr Tea Sela, Sewing Mnehlncn, Gold Wnlchm. Sll- ver Watches. and lnnumeruble Olin-r Valuable Rewards. 1.â€"W‘hero is GOLD (in: undo monclon of In the Bible? 2.;Whara does“: fin! state in tho Bib]. um then m ONLY ONE LANGUAUI An) on SPEECH on tho whole ouch? 3,â€"Wharo is INN first relened to in th- Blhlt’ (By the word inn is meant a place of run find rofroahnouc fommonly known now be tn hotol.) The Largest List, and Most Valu- able Ever Offered by Any Publisher. Residents of Toronto Inadmissable Special Club Ofi'er. Don't Delay Sending mYour Answers. For Persons Residing Anywhere in the World Outside the City of Toronto. “ Truth " Bible Competitlon. 331500000. A NEW PLAN. NO. ELEVEN. Read his fimatliat of THE FINAL ONE. Closing Sentember 15th. A SMALL FARM FREE. HERE ARE THE QUESTIONS. MIDDLE REWARDS. FIRST REWARDS. THE NEW JWIIAIIIA‘MS l u u n F! n - n u . Active pushing men wanted to wholenale my 'fumous tens to consumers. Salary from $600 to @2009 per year. Sand camp for particulars, J AMBs LAfiT,’ Importer, In“. A Not another Pill shall go down my throat. again. said a citizen, “ when 1 can get such a prompt and pleasant cure for my Bilioua Atbncka, such as Dr. Carson's Stom- ach Bitters. It renders the Blood Pure and Cool and makes a Splendid Spring Medicine. Large files 50 cents. Toronto‘ No information will be given any one be- yond what has above been sated. So don’t waste time by waiting, but send in your answers and money now. It 011 happen to be too Into for the first. you éy be fortunate enough he obtain a middle re ard. and that 1's where the biggest ones are. TRUTH directs special attention to the fact that clergyman are not permitted to compote. noither are persons who in previous competitions won pnzes ex- needing one hundred doll-rs in value, ml as no Toronunlanl are Allowed to oompote, the flold is now a n for 15 tau- and square race for than row" I to any on. on the humble aloha. outside Toronto. No money wlll be received by tales". h. or in any way but through the pesto on or by express. One donor on]? refinired. Try your skill. You arssureo fiyo value for ourmonsy anyway. Adam: S rtmlz Wilson. RUTH omoe, t3 and 36 Adelaidostreet. Toronto, Canada. DEEJHEQUHUW Stea_ms_hips- i even the lat may not feel that they are to be i lets out. TRUTH will give a series of COISOLATION REWARDS 1 Lâ€"Beginning with another of those ‘ nne pianos. by Stevenson a: 00., which have been received with so n-uch satisfaction by prile winners in nevloul competitions . . . . . . . . 3550 on 2.- 1n. fellows another BellOrga 250 on amAnether Silver Tea Set, 6 pieces. beet quadruple plate . . . , . . . . . . . 100 00 Lâ€"Gentlemen's Solid Gold Genuine Elgi'l Watch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 m 5.~â€"Lady's Solid Gold Genuine Elgin Watch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95 0| &v~0ne celebrated "New Home" Sew- ing Machine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7toii.â€"-Five beautiful heavy Black Silk Dresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 250 (,0 12 to 29.-~Eighteen Solid Coin Silver Watches ...... moo 80 to 4l.-â€"I‘weive Ladies’Solid Coin Sil- ver Huntingcase Watches . . . . . . . . 34,0 00 42 to 57,~Sixteen Solid Nickle Silver Watches . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 240 00 58 to 7l.~--Fourteen renowned Water- bury Watches . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70 0° 72 to 209.â€"0ne hundred and thinly-eight elegantly bound volumes of niver- sol Cyclo edin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4H. 00 210 to 311.â€"-One undred and two Ladies' Fine Rolled Gold Pins or Brooches 204 00 312 to 40l.â€"--Ninety Solid Triple Silver- plated Butter Knives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90 00 The further you live from Toronto the better you can compete for these lastlor consolation rewards. Bear in mind that it is the last cor- rect answer received at the oflice of TRUTH that gets number one of these consolation r61 wards. The ofl’or is open only till the 15th Sep- tember. and as long as your letter bears the gostmark. uh re mailed, of the date of 15th ‘eptember, will take its place in the order received at UTH Office. Fifteen days after date of closin Will be allowed for letters from distant point t reach Toronto, but don’t for- gemthat you r fitter must not bear alater post mark than September 15th. All com eting must send with their answers one do] ar for six monts' subscription to TRUTH, [which will be sent to any desired address Wherever you live, outside Toronto, you can compete at any time between now and the closing day for either the first or middle re wards. and as wellas. of course, for the console, tion rewards. Some one will get those five acres of landu-why not you? Look up your Bible now and see if you can find the answers to these ‘ questions. It will do you good, apart from the l ODpor unity you have of obtaining a va uable reward in addition to TRUTH. which alone is uood value for the one dollar. It consists of 28 pages of choice and pure reading matter for the home circleâ€"-something to interest every member of the family. The publisher could not atl’ord to give these valuable rewards unless he was certain of your patronage in years to come. and you are almost certain to become lil'e subscribers to TRUTH ii on take it for six montha,it is eucha spiendi .weekly (not month- yl) magazine. Special Club Ofler to Yearly Subscribers 11 twenty-nve pe'sone JOID and send $50. each one or the twenty-five whose answers are correct will get their choice of aeolid-rolled gold brooch. new and elegant design. worth at retail two dollars; a. Chambere' hmymoloricnl Dictionarva. worth about some amount; 3. World‘s nivereal Cyclolpwdie. or a volume elegantly bound of She eapeare's Complete Works. Of course. each of the club will have the same opportunity 0! aeinin one of the rewards in the regular list (in a. dition to the oertainxty of one of the prizes aforesaid). on though they had sent in singly. This is rlmply anjxtrn inducement to clubs. The rewards in last competition were very widely muttered over Ontario and Quebec. In fact, every province was represented in the last, not exceptinr British Columbia. A great mgnv p190 went to the States. Most any scEema is feasible with a law- If? 0 New York. Meriden (CL), Chicago, San Francisco, London, (Eug.). BRANCH FACTORYâ€"Cor. Cannon and Wellington Streets, Hamilton, MERIDEN BRITANNIA 093 gimt mmm @9111 3:91 ‘ gum grate, Nam VAI-IT Ila-Ll..- In; \ n1. Many purchasers having through I similarity of names purchased other wares under the impression that they were of our manufacture, we are compell- ed to ask special attention to the abova TRADE MARKS The fact them our Inglis andjl‘xzade Marks nreMbgring so close- .‘ud, “- ,J- _. .-.. mm...“ mm- ly imitated should be a sufiicienz “5.1mm tee to the public tha u: was an the Di‘um 1“ m"... u. BEST'm'i‘fii WERE). -â€":) MANUFACTURERS 0F (:â€" Unfinlled in material. construction and flnhh. Del" feet in accuracy and unequalled in (inability. Guan- anteed to give entire satisfaction RAILROAD. WAREHOUSE A TRUCKS. GURNEYS 8c WARE, Cordial, moat wholesome, delicious and eahing beverage. Strictly pure and entirely tree from AlcohoL Gold Medal Calcutta Exhibition. Sold by all drug "at! and grocers. Sole proprietors H. SUGDEN EV S 90.. Montreal. Agents. JAB. H. PEARCE 1 CO, CARBOLIC ACID AND GLYCERINB STANDARE? SCALES. The best in the world for 8.)] din _ eases of the Skin. on Man or Bead Sold by all druggista. THE ALBERT TOILET SOAP 0038 THE WILLIAMS’ MFflfifl. Lime Fruit Juice. THE BEST, THE $TRONGEST; THE MOST RELIABLE. WHATASHKLL I DRINK ! It is strong, durable, and well 'built, of the very best material that money can buy or skill produce. It was awarded five medals and three first prizes at the Dominion Exhibition last October. It; is rapidly superseding all the old fashioned makes everywhere. See it, try it, buy it, and makesure that you get it. Tenoner. 1 Buggy Plainer 10 Saw Tables, 1 Fire-Prov.) Steel. 1 Book-Binder's Scrt Burr Portable Grist Mill. 1 he. 8m. Semi for new list. scription of machinery in at» 1783 Notre Dame Sh, Montreal, and K?ng 8%., West, Toronto. 70 King Street, East, Toronto. Large double Driving Belts 3. specialty. Sand for Pnce Lists and Discounts Sewing Machine nf tha Period. It Is Light and Easy to run. Silent and Rapid in movement. Plain and Simple to learn! The most convenient meat for farmers in their busy. season. These mews are cooked and re: hr use Sold by grocers through the Dominion Sen for prion to W. CLARK P. 0. Box 342 Montreal- Drain Pipes, Portland Cement. Chimney Tops. Canada Cement, Vent Linings. Water Lime. Flue Covers, Whiting, Fire Bricks, Plaster of Paris. Fire Clay. Borax. Roman Cement. Chin: Clay Manufacturers of Bessemer Steel sofa. Chau- Bed & Run-inn SMOKEDSAUSAG’EK Leéfifiéfifiéffihg ! High Wellington Street. Montreal. Wenlnmn Chambers, Glasgow. 28 Paternoster now. London. GURNEY‘S. & WARE, F. E DIXON & 00; W. & F. P. Currie & Co. BAR IRON. ' SHEET METALS. FIRE CLAY GOODS. CHEMICAESEED OILS. Conla‘fi‘d‘ " E"‘M6‘Earen, Import Orders. THEY EXCEL ALL OTHERS- SOAP! The best in the world for all dis Janene A: um man A“ Mnâ€" A. DAM. Burton’s Alliflealing’ TAR AND GLYCERINE QHAD‘ 'onbo‘ Mills’ Alarm Money Drawers; mmmusmmmmm Mangfactnrerl or Stal- Rivet TRANSPARENT X00 Grey Nun 815., Montreal. . ImFO‘iW” PL Is the best in the market. Orders i0 igmhii mafia; THE MONTSERRAT Machine is:now recognized as the 1847 Rogers Bros. Al. TRADE MA RK. , Ont.

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