Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 5 Feb 1885, p. 3

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Bitten by a Cobra. Among many instances of snake-bite poisoning I have seen was astrong young B of twenty, well known to me, who h been bitten during the night while watching his maize crop. Ere I knew of it they had brought him into my Compound in front of the bungalow. As yet he walked quite steadily, only lean- ing slightly on the arm of another man. There was that peculiar drowsy look in his eyes, however, as from a strong nar- cotic, which indicated his having been bitten for some time. and left but little room for hope now. He could still clearly tell me particulars. He had been bitten, he said on putting his foot to the ground, while moviugotf his charpoy in the dark, but, thinking the bite was that of a non-poisonous snake, liad given no more heed to the matter, and gone to sleep again, till he was awoke by his friends coming in search of him With some difficulty I was able to find the biteâ€"very faint no larger than the prick from a pin. but still the unmistak- Lble double mark of the poison fangs. tie it the poison, he said, gradually ascend- ; the limb, and pointed to a part just ove the knee, where he felt it had. al- Idy reached, the limb below that being, said, benumbed, and painless to the ch, like the foot when "asleep." I a him the usual remedies, and kept walking to and fro, but gradually limbs seemed to be losing their pzm-E'r oluntary motion, and his head was to droop from the overpower- rowsinss that was surely gr thering 0 him. At intervals he pointed out oison line steadily rising higher, and wastill able to answer questions clearly on‘eing roused. ilength it seemed to be of _no use to'iin him further by keeping him m g a ut, and he was allowed to re- at rest. Shortly after this, while Cattle-Ranch Speculation. One of the most profitable businesses in the country has been the herding of cattle on the plains in the West. Up to a very recent period pasture cost the herdsinan just nothing at all. for he turn- ed the cattle loose on the unsold govern- ment lands. A four-year old steer raised under this system cost less than four dol- lars, and, upon being drIVen to a railway station, sold for eighteen or twenty dol- lars. This lucrative industry his pro- ducedarace of cattle millionaires who have beCOme as powerful as they are rich. They have been holding conventions in Chicago and St. Louis, and are asking favors of Congress. It seems that the recent large western emigration has rur- tailed their grazing-grounds, and in many instances they haw been forced to pur- chase pasture which formerly cost them nothing. As the Texas cattle are benefit- ed io health by being driven north on foot instead of being carried by railway the cattle kings ask the United States to give them a cattle trail extending from Jentral Texas to the Canada frontier, a distance of 1,500 miles in length by ten miles in width. This is a magnificent scheme, but the farmers in the several States and Territories interested object, as they say the cattle men wouldnot keep willllll the limit! of the ten miles, but Would overrun lhe border country. It seems the cattle kings, With their armies of cowboys, have treated the settlers very badly, Overruning their farms and seizing every available stream or lake of water for the use of their cattle. Many of these ranch owncrs are foreigners, and not a few of tnem sprigs of English nobi ity. The” aliens are n w monopoliziug our soil by hundreds of thousands of acres. Indeed, the continued high price of meat and the profitablenoss of cattle-ranches have created quite is. speculation in the wild lands of the West. , it supported in a sitting p_osture,_ all i , without any premonitory sign, e we or two long sighs, and llfd . , about an hour after he had him- :Ile lkod into the compound. There was mocking terribly real in this faculty 9* out each stage of the ascend- iu the snake-bitten patient al- n) that was gradually bringing him re! and nearer to death, With the pros t of only another hour or half- hour life remaining in him ; and yet the plant does not seem to realize this With to kesnness that a locker-on does, probdy from the poison benuinbing at the sac time the powers of the mind as well rid the body. MOM Torturcs in Bengal Jails. The Indian Statesman, referring to an inquiry which has been directed to be made by lhu Lieutenant-G .vernor “as to the tortures which are declared to be practised in the prisons of these provirr oer, particularly in the Presidency Jail, under the pretense of maintaining disci- pliue,” says: “I'hs whole world knows the mortality that prevails in the jails of Bengal, and in particular the Presidency Jail. Now, our informants do not scrupls to say that many men therein have practicdly been ‘murdered’ in the last twelve years by the repeated flog- gings to which they were subjected until their bodies Were a mass or gangrene. Some years ago a letter in the Indian Doi y News partially lifted the veil upon this prison-house, and the public heard, with indignation, of the lash being laid on ‘at intervals of one minute,’ to prolong the torture, and of the tail ends of the cats being fitted with contrivances to cut and tear the flash from the body; that floggiugs were repeated before the wounds caused by previous lashings were healed, and that the number of corporal punishments in this jail were from thirty to sixty daily. We are quoting the very words of along letter in the Indian Daily News of the llizh of February, 1877, and those infamous bruta‘ities,lor similar ones, are practiced, we are assured, still. \Vhen a prisoner dies in hospital frim these tortures the very superintendent of the jail, generally a medical officer, holds the inquest, and the verdict is one that suppresses everything that is vital in the case. Only yesterday did another gen- tleman, whose duties take him frequently to the jail, tell us that he had seen a bun- dred men at a time crowded round the hospital for treatment, and he reminded us or the fact that but three or four years ago the jail officials reduced the dietary scale of the prisoners in a way that was instantly followed by the miserable pri- soners dying like so many files in the wards.” ’ 'flic Smallest Republic. Tie whole territory of the state (San Mamo) consists of sixteen square miles, andhas apopulation of about 9,000 souls. Th capital city, inclusive of the Borgo at 38 foot, has over 900 inhabitants. The arty is crmposed of ten companies of niety men each ; but perhaps our guide fogot to reckon the reserves, for Mr. But says that the military force is 2,000 stong, and that half the ableâ€"bodied men of every family must be enr‘olled between :3 ages of sixteen and sixty-five, unless ey are government officers, doctors, .iests or students. The entire revenue «1 the state is less than £5,000 a. year,but lan Marino is a model of financial pru- lence, and has no public debts, lives within its income, and has even a nest egg laid by against rainy days. And al- though it bestows no titles on in own subj:cts, it swells the exchequer by the sale of orders and titles of nobility to foreigners. To avoid complications with Italy ithasno printing press within its dominions. For the same reason it re- frains from growing tobacco, and, buying the leaf from ltaly at cost price, contents itself with manufacturing its own cigars. It possesses no penal establishments, but has made a very pleasant arrangement with its obliging m i ghbor. San Marino sends its crimiials to be punished in Italy, and, although that part of the arr-zinge- ment is not recorded in black and white, may be said to receive monks and nuns in ex change. For the two large nun- neries and four monasteries of this tiny stats afford the devout, uncurtailed piivl- leges that are no longer, it seems, to be enjoyed across the border. 6*” Burglar Stories. One night a dear old lady was going to bed in a remote chamber in a, big house when she accidentally perceived a man hidden under the bedstead. She knelt down by the bedside, and repeated aloud the beautiful collect of the evening prayer of the Church of Eng and. She then blew out her candle and quietly got into bed. Presently avoice sounded un- derneath the bed telling her not to be afraid he would do her no harm. The burglar then came out and said that this was hls first offence, and that he had been driven to it by poverty. He added that the words of the collect had recalled to him the time when he was still innocen‘, and that if she would only forgive him he would go away quietly and never offend against the law again. The story goes on to say that the man was truly repent- and that the good lady saw him earning an honest living. in know or one or two cases in which there has been great courage on the side of the ariacked party and great cowardice on that of the burglars. In fact, this is generally the case when burglars have to deal withthe police. 1 have a friend- a slight, delicate lady, who has shown marâ€" velous courage in cowing a. burglar. She went into her kitchen one night when the servants were out or had gone to bed, and found a man in the act of packing up all her silvrr plate. She resolutely li Ck- ed the kitchen door, put the key in her pocket. and tcldliim that he should not leave the room until he had placed back every article of : ilVer where he had found it. The man obéycd her in the most ab- ject manner, and was then allowed to sneak out of the placeâ€"[All the Year Round, Miners' Luck. The death of Peter Whyte recalls the strange story -‘f the founding of Victoria. Australia In an Australian mining camp at one of the tents sat four menâ€"the 10th of June, 1858 â€"â€"talking earnestly of their future and bemoaning the past. For several months these four men had work- ed together in the same claim, somefimes got ing barely sufficient for daily wants, sometimes not even for that. For se- veral weeks, indeed, they had labored without any result. After a long discus~ sion they decided to abandon the claim. Down in the mine the three lookedgloom~ ily around with a kind of sulliy regret at having to leave a scene of so much. use- less toil, “Good-by," said one : “I'll give you a farewell blow," and raising his pick he struck the quartz. making splinters fly in all directions. His prac- liced eye caught a. glittering speck in one of the hits at his foot. Stooping, he ex- amined it and the place he had struck, when, with a loud exclamation, he knelt and satisfied himself that it was gold ‘. He then commenced picking rigorously. His mates caughtthe meaning and follow- ed his example. In dead silence they worked onâ€"they had discovered 3 mon- ster nugget. 'llien a wild, glad shout sounded in the ears of the one at the Windlass, Wll') had sunk into a. half-dose, feeling probably the want of his break- fast. To his inquiry. “What is going on '2" the cry came, “Wind up.” and us he did so there rose to the surface a huge mass of virgin gold. When fully‘ixpos- ed to vie .. the men were almost insane with joy. After watching it through the day and live long night they had it. con- Veyed in safety to the bank. It was named the Welcome Stranger. und‘yield- ed the fortunate discovercrs of it $30,000. On the site of that spot the forest and the scrub have disappeared and their place is occupied by the finest city on the celebrated go d field of Victoria. Artificial Sea-water, It was supposed for many years that there was some mystery in natural sub- stances that made it imposslble for man to reproduce them. Organic substance, it was supposedâ€" that is, matter created by a living organismâ€"could not be suc- cessfully recreated by the art of manl But this is proved to have been a mis- taken notion. Urea, an animal sub- stance, was among the first that was scientifically reproduced. Since then many other other organic substances have been recomposed by cln a. late and physi- cists. It has been believed, for insurance, that artificial seaâ€"water could not be created, and the fact that salt-water fish died in the first imitations of salt water seemed toconfirin this belief. But the scientists in Berlin have reproduced a. salt water that is actually superior to that of the ocean, and in which silt fish live and thrive better than in salt water brought from the ocean. Like wins, this ariificial water improves with age, while the (cash water deteriorates. In the Hamburg aquarium the water has not; been changed for filteen years, and it is perfectly clear, odorless, and of the very best quality. All that is needed is to add something to make up for evaporation. The following is the receipt for making artificial sea-water: lhirteen and one- quarter gallons of pure, hard Well-Water, forty-six and shelf ounces of common salt, three and a half ounces sulphate of magnesium, five sud a quarter ouncss of chlorate of magnesium, and l.Wo ounces of sulphate of potassium. This mixture is allovwd to stand for some time, when some live salt-water alga: adhering to stories should be added. These alga: multiply and grow quickly, and their funcl'ion is to supply oxygen to the water. Some hardy animals could then be put in, audi- the sign mul iply more tender ones could be mlded. Should the water become turbid, it should be filtered, and, Impormni. When you vlsli or leave Bow York City, save Buggng Expresruge and Carriage Hire. and stop at the GRAND UNioN HOTEL. on 'OSIV: Grand Central Depot 600 elegant rooms litte up at a cost of One million dollars, 81 and upwards per day European plan Elevator Restaurant supplied with the best. Home cars stages and elevated railroads to all do ots Fam» “we can live better for less menus at the mud "aim Hotel than at our other first-class hotel in the City. . i 214 ... " nos Gunman a 0.... Cotton. Woollen. 8111.03 out and Worshvd “‘l‘lllrbll li a Dunn“, um snle u‘ENâ€"uo .1) rev Tl) MEN WHO WILL k work, LHASs. unorniins. Nurserymen, Lnkepirt. Out. I 'N’i'r iiiiiis Piis'iriiiiis'r«will: IMMUR’I‘AL ‘ «u u w" mud "Wrâ€" i‘ins a .d ill veHl‘u" may lJeLEU’i {re z'r-n em) ication to JESSIE (l. R USE, 07 Ht, .lamph St . Toronto. #7, 17*” NY rE£F§01Â¥r AFFLIOTE I with blue 1V 0 RHEUMAI‘AHM nil: hear of min-thing greatly to their advantage by sending their address upon a pf‘st c .rdto ire RHEUMATIU Rr L.EF Co., ULilkarW-iotl, Out T0 330.) AND EXPENSES A MONTH Guns. ANTEED to Assure everywhere. Circulan slum SHLI" stamp for reply. W. A HOATH a 00.. Toronto Canada '77 r v __'_ _ ‘VOR SALEâ€"TIMBER. COAL AND ION ORE I land-1: stock, fruit and truck f-i. ms, orlnge groves ranches Mall S lunhern States. Addre‘sW. R. STUART 6'1 Caruudeletâ€" t . Nsw "lane, ‘ onii-isna. Full. description 'I‘ulll-ir system of MOODY by return mad. Moody's New I. Dress Cutting. Toron to, 2:. t. ADIES AND 015 YI‘LEKEN TO LEARN TELE PROF. Mara;ev. ""R.’ WTPRIT'riE. Real Estate Agent. (3 :miriiurio'wr, Vs'mto'. Trustees- in Fin-ucvnl Agent Room 0. Acvdo. Yuurc Sn. Toronto. Money to Loan Estates managed. Proper-is: Eschauged. AND STAMP METAL & RUBBER DATERS. SELF- lllleRS 6L BANKlNG STAMPS. NOTARY SEALS. tc. AGENTS WANTED. ‘riEllYON, TINGLEY dc STEWART MFG. C0., 72 KING ST. WEST. he Mutual Marriage livid» inn :iit Afissoc-i lotion of London Has been In successful operation sinca‘qept:mlier, 1883 ltludowmen: clai us to the amount of $18 ‘I 0 nave he- ii setll 1] since the let day of December. 1381. The plan if a ngulur system of iv onthly assessments places a mar a...“ l l All kinds of 1129’s! atom mode to order. Deters. Be - li.ki_rs. ltd road. Hunhizil. Notary and S -cietv Ptc. \gents Wanled. COOK l. BUNKER. 85 St , W. at. Tirouto Fort PLEASANT SEWING â€" JTSE ONLYâ€"â€" Clappertin’s spool Cottonl W’erranterl FULL Length, and to run smofih on In, “smut! me o'm in See ihst Cnsrrnn'ross name Is on the label. 113' For sale by all Dry-Good I)l slats. __.__.‘ E; UPTUhmâ€"num'fi IMP“ ,I .rlAL'I‘RUSS with 15 Spiral Spring V is. the best ever invented. Took ten ‘ years to [oi-fret. Cures every child. 8 out of 10 adults. Holds the want Herniafiuring hsr *th work,or money r: funded. 2's years [r retinal e r- _ . ieucs. "irculars free. Address 1‘ 5153' I" 0 AN IMPFRIAL TRUSS 00.. 33 a) Edslside St. East Toronto. Ont. Compound Oxygen. LINDSAY, GROCER, 80 KING STREET 0 west. Toronto, writes :â€"Have snflered for years with Dyspepsia ; felt great distress after eating; dared not eat bread or potatoes; thought there wll no help for me ; that I must suffer while i lived; was mducsd to try “Compound Oxygen" at 73 King street West ; at the end of three weeks could eat any food I wished, and gained six pounds ; have now taken one month's treatment, and feel like a new man altogether: no sign of rheumatism, which has troubled me every Winter for years. Running in connection with the Grand Trunk Ball!“ 7! Canada. Sailing from Quebec every Saturday anvil. be summer months, and from Portland every Thanh] luring the winter months. Boiling dates from PORTLAD' D. Jen. I atnlarlo, For Info. Jan. Ill [Dominion isomrenl, Jun. 29 | Rules of passage: Osbir. sues to'lecrpool SE, “0 $65. 380. Return, .90, 51%]. 2112'. 8144. according to stenle and i erth. Intermediate 3:55. assume I. lowest rates, The saloons and staterooms in ate-men marke‘ thus: ' are amidshlps. where but little motion felt and no cattle or sheep is carried on them. For flu ther particulars apply to our Grand Trunk Elfin] Agent or local agents of the Company. or to [JAVIER ’l‘l-BBI-HCE d (20.. General Agents. Montreal. Brooklyn, :Jan. 8 Jun. 21 Allan Lilia Royal Mail Steamsmni. Hallan during white-z from Portland every '1th and Halifax every Saturday to Liverpool. and In summ from Quebec every hsturday to Liverpool. calling at [an douderry to land mlilB and passengers for boatload and rinse End wment wilhu he re'vCh of all unmarried power". Sand for Bv-Lawi. RELIABLE AGENTS WAl‘TED. \V. l. IlilLAL‘lI S crr‘t ry, Load in. Ont in; -ll.ir soulzrn WILLIAM [Will 5’ SEEDE SHALL BEfil’ [i ABUND‘NC'E. If my weds are not add in your town, send fci'iny Illusttav’d and Discrlptls eZCataiogue, hlulled the to all applicants. Wm. Evans, Seeisman, Montreal. Established 1853.] (island. Also from Baltimore via Halifax and BI John's N. R. to Liverpool fortnightly during summer months. [the steamers of the Glasgow lines sail dunnswlnlel between Portland and Glasgow, and Boston and bun to make sure of the supply of oxygen,an aerating apparatus can b i used with ad- vantage. The success in reproducinoV sea- water makes it possible for man 12’) some- tiineget the secretof the medicinal waters which now can be taken With advantage only in lhe locations where they are found. alternately; and durum summer between Quebec and Glasgow and Boston and Glasgow every week. For Lreignt. passage, or other information apply to A. Schumacher 300.. Baltimore; B. Cunard: &Co.. Halifax; Shea 8.00. St. John‘s :4.F.; Win. Thomson 8:. Co.. at. John. 11.3. Allan A. Go. chicag‘ ; Love a Alden. New York; H. Bunrller.’ iii-onto ; Aliens. Rae £00 aux-pee; n. A. Allen. Portland. Boston. Hell trra Isabella and the Earthquake. Queen Isabella was rudely shaken by J the repeated shocks of earthquake at Se- 5 ‘ vi...- a A ~ ,, --,..-- ~ ’ I .-,. . . . l‘si . .. . .., . ., Ville,Spain,butnotseriously hurt. Shehad g a narrow escape of being in the sauce (mil “,4, ,, ,7}, hm, 5,, MW}, a,“ bill.“ peuiin the theatre, Where she was to have ‘ ' “M P“ “”l§8§."r“~“’151$"r"“ "1:315. Hi 'f'c‘qi". - d v a ' rt ‘ hit .4. '. - ‘ ~ » Tii-m'f'ii‘iiiifgueiroei‘, E‘... iomuco. ass, THOBNE Dflmlmon Lme of Steamshlpsi EVERY FARMER, “so mun-urine n mambo" l,“ v! t' o \wr-L nlml and or unit; he: n}~..n~.i. Mommas vnylsmvmith wunessed an “Mm, ope“. Buy, the “a. IXIlISLlflf'l"v.lllfl[filllF?711l1‘\\OIn l'." ‘sricho- ‘59 EBPECULIY THC" LIVING 01‘ 33m” “13- ex )ec.ed arrival. of a welcome viiitor ke t figyugdz'. h A: .\ IJAUI.E 'i'llFAlT ISL; ll‘Il‘ Lila disenss.to . _ . s rcr .' ’,1DVISF)HI41 ’. .m : rows. ‘ . ‘ j . p Du 1., A imam) m rwmhflewnm shtu u send me postal card. With address. for Sectional Maps and particulars of the special afar made by the St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba Ry. for their lands in the Red River Valley within sho. t distance 0: track. Only 50c. per am down.- also Nine Million acres Free Govenr men-t Land in the Turtle Mountain and Devil‘s. Districts, North Delta to. Parliculars free. H. F. McNally, Gen. Trev. Agent. Sr. Paul. Min. 8: Manitoba Railway. (ilem'ion this paper ) TORONTO. 0N!l GAU'EION ! her at home. She was taking a. cup of tea and laughing at the solemn talk of her parro: when the first oscillation took place. The bird fall dmn fainliiig from its perch, just as might a young lady. isabella's armchair toppled over, and the ‘- cup Was flung from bani A mem- tin.insureds;rationales“"lb-m ber of her household writes that she was .7 .m REGUT ! int alarmed until coin: time aft:r the Siiir I shock, when there was a nervous reaction. Dox‘m WAer Tum. a on Brim; TO THE ONTARIO FILE 80. When she felt the earthquake she cried out, “Why, if I ware not in my own house I should fancy we were in a sinking ship." A second shook at midnight, and '50 pm“, .",,.,_ [in-t. “Wyn”. ‘ , l t The most convenient meat for farmers in their bus reason. These meats are cooked and road for 21!: a third at dawn, rather upset her. Her ears were assailed by the cries of the poo- Sold by grocers through the Dominion. See (or on: haw ‘Y.ARK P n an un Mane-MI ple in the streets. She telegraphed to the King to send money at once for dis- W. 61?. lt’.UUITle 6: Lu it!) Grey .\ on Street. Montreal. R. U. AWARE TH AT Lerillard’s Climax Plug l'um'ing a rrzl [in fag; this! Lorillard'e Rune Lei-{line out; that Lorillard's tribution among the greatest sufferers, and has placed the Palais de Castillo at the disposal of a Spanish committee, which Will give a. fete there for the bane- fit of the victims of the earthquakes in ‘ . . Importers of Southern Spain. Qlt is allgo proposed to “mg. mp... Puritland C‘gmeEI, set up in the ex- ueen‘s aris residence 0 lime-V To”: “Deflflmm 9"” 10W" . . . . Wat ere, FluoI Covers Whltl , an exhibition of lace. jewels, fans, art mic linen. Plaster of Paris it... on. EaCh Plug or the Baron, Roman Cement. hma Om prayer books, and objets de piete belong- ing to the Spanish royal family. Aslioiv of this kind would be all profit. #40040”?â€" The New Aninsthetic. blanufsotnvers of may“ or Steal sofa. Cnau' a: Bed ism-tr as WPER‘A’TIVE o..............., SEWING MlllHlllE which produces unconsciousness only in ,. the locality if the body to whi :h it is ap- PRICE $20 C‘isu' s plied, is coming into active use. The Oili‘ll0\V machine is now ready. and is a, swelling on General Grant's tongue, go“ as my ‘SO‘MVI’V'V ‘Agcmsfm “’3‘ which it is feared may be cancerous. has “5" “ESTl‘WM “‘ ' _ 5‘ been greatly reduced by the use (if this M . _ _ LZ“"1‘*]“‘,“)";E- _1‘ n" It 5}] ‘ ' (LC-line al'l‘lt'cl 8. rlgl , an 15 C67 all] y new remedy' A PhySI 13‘“ .(f Vienna" well worth the money you ask for it. with lls Dr. Fleischl, declares that ll? Will cure I present inlproVi-nicnts. I prefer it to the rapidly and painlessly the efl‘ects of bad "eialgrr." “"‘lmzer' My“! Ott'W‘hmfikC at 560 - u' v - l ' . ll.‘ 1' . 113.3103] 1i;1 tiie efiessi‘ve usetnof rigorphing mt ' U‘AixoxyLIA‘VKle an ace 0 . ie ‘ pstien is epiive , , of the drug or the liquor. and the terrible New AttaChmBllts. llBW Furniture, nervous prostration which has always fl 1 q _ lowed the abandonment of these stimu- haw “tand‘ lants is prevented by hypodermic injec Send stump for'samp'cs of sewinu’ and (HP tiona of cocoaine chloride_ A cure is 9f. \elogiut descriptive photographs of the MYRTLE NAVY I IS MARKED T- In Bronze Letters. » NONE suits GENUINE. fecbed in ten days The trouble about machine before buying from Agents. this newest discovery is that. as soon as MACHINES SENT 0N TRIAL- it is lino i is people, assured that they can BONUS -.â€"Fro n now until March 3lst, 133i be cured when lhey got too bid. will be_ we will give to any person sending us Shun . - cash in udvaiicofor one of our machines. a come reckless In the use Of Oplum an combination tab‘o and brar‘kc‘. ‘ OR Flattering and bringing into condition. Rona Gown. Calves" Sheep and Pigs. The Yonxsml osr’rtn Francs is used and recommended by first- class breeders. Milk Cattle produce more an handsome butler. It futtsm ln one-fourth the usual tins. and liquor_ The drug‘ however, is very ex. lump cantilplelo. k'l‘nesc ’laitilipslirrelsopiellijng my Food . x ' ' _ ' LlCW lln ll’l lllll '(‘l‘ \Vllll S lei 1 ill: ‘0( llL‘lH . n _ , ‘ '_ _ penswe' and those temptid to disslpitwn ll 'you or any of your friends want u lllLlClllll‘) gag: “5'5 “5.31 9‘“ tn- A all" h“ “a” don't delay, but send to Uo-Dperatie Sewing Machine 00,, ‘22 Jlilllt‘) sl South. llarlillloil, Ont. should ,remember that if they spend all their money indulging in their bad habits they will have none left to spend for the cure. HUGH MILLER and 00.. Aosrmrunsr. Onassis-rs. 167. (unfit Rut. Term For rule hr Tim: mats Evervv here. JllllllSlllll’t lllllli Btlf â€".-â€"â€"- lm’om The Nicaragua Canal. Little faith is placed in Panama in the Nicaragua Canal. The experience {valu- ed in the 47 miles of work on the Panama 1 Canal leads all practical men to foresee it In, the i my pirpeiriu‘of lhiklnd which 60"‘1llifl all 'no miritio i: , lcga he:1 whit): till. , 8 .. r 7 silviiu‘ntiig. l.l‘\‘lJ(I‘ its cl turf an t ecu! , Eng") ) , J-l - one «you has no owr in slips] nourish.- , JOHNSTONS mom. for brim, «nd \018. m (1 mm c. ...-.â€"._â€". ,4 M ._ figment 00., ‘W‘id . - L " . . ~er . the great difficulties which have t) be overcome in the 145 miles of the Nicara. guan Canal. One river, the Chagres, i- _........_...._..-_...._.._ ___ the great obstacle to rapid advances. In r i I Musician :) mm‘sc-rrnnns or (2â€"â€" y the San Juan itself there is a. mightier glam (Millie drill mm film allele, obstacle, while its numerous militants New York. Meriden (CL), Chicago, San Francisco, London, (EngJ. pour millions of tons of water and debris into what is pinposed shall be converted BRANCH FACTORYâ€"Cor. Cannon and Wellington Streets, Hamlin n, Ont. V Many purchasers having through I TRADE in‘oa navigable channel. The rapils, which are so frequently spoken of as t forming barriers to the success of ills: , work, are in really the most favorable ‘l similarity of names plirchmeil other wares under thgfimprcssiou that they #‘*~“"___-"â€"â€"‘ Were ofrnr man nature We urecoznpsl - ed tonsk specinlnttcntilfn to the above 1847 Rogers Bros. A1. l spots for locks. It ii the muddy 36 ' miles from the mouth of the river, or [he I l l TRADE MARKS The fact that our , name and Trade Marks are bei so close- , ly imitated should be a sulficlen guaran- K tee to the public that our were] are BEST 1N THE WORLD. dredging of the lake, and the cutting be- I tween that sheet of water and the shore, which combine to prevent the work being ‘ undertaken simultaneously with the Mr: easier and partially completed canal at Panama. I H

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