Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 6 Dec 1888, p. 2

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While the demand for pure bred stock in Canada has not been active of late years, there is not a snflicient lack of demand to justify the term depression. Few of our breeders have retired from business, and a sufficient number have engaged in it to pre- vent any loss of ground, so far as the number of stock cattle is concerned. The lack of de- mand is reasonably enough ascribed to the comparatively low price of wheat and beef which have ruled for several years. Still there are signs that here, as in the United States, the era of very high prices is over. Inlividual animals, and some families oi animals, will sell at probably as high prices as ever, but they must be choice. The mere fact of pure blood will Weigh less than in the past. The change may be unwelcome to some breeders, but nevertheless the wise will adapt themselves to it and aim at that individual excellence in breeding which, like analogous efl’orts in other departments of human labor, always leaves abundant: room at the top. In the United States the change has come more rapidly than here, and it is now common (or pure bred spring bulls to be converted into steers and pure bred cows to be spayed. The change will bring advant- ages to the farmer, and incldentally to the breeding interest. The time wasI not long since. when animals of decided inferiority were purchased and locally “boomed” simply because they were imported or of pure blood. While reversion to the type of some remote ancestor of the days vhen the leading breeds had not become fixed in typsis ex. ceedingly uncommon, there is danger that the accidental defect of individual animals may be more or less transferred to their offspring. 1i re and do 30ml ztrvxut: us bearers, they must have room in which to spread their lim he, and from which to get their susten- anca. In the American Agriculturist. Simml-Hope says : A promising orchard of 1 301) men, the property of a neighbor oil mine, fnso beginning tn beer and on which the owner realized 3908' last season, was sucrificebm the Close-planting pollcy. The trees, which one year ago showed evidence of health and vigor, have assumed a sickly appearance. Cutting out every alternate tree, with a. liberal dressing of fertilizers», will save the orchard if tbo- owner has the intelu'gence and nerve to in it at once.. But what a loss to the soil, mic production : of 159 trees which can only be “ cut down ’4 and cast into the fire." And “ the survival 1 of the fittest ” will be set bscle tw0 yenrs at ‘ least by this plsn oi planting and then thinning an orchard. The apple tree de- mands a. rich moist soil. L‘- tbese con- ditions are furnished, it sssumes large proportions and gives immense yielns. ’hy, then, dwarf, starve 5nd mutilate? Is it not better to have fi ve thriity trees pro duclng fifty bushels of healthy fine fruit ‘ than fifty trees wivh fifty bushels oi wormy, 1 knotty, grsrly specimens fit only for pigs ‘ and thieving Vergrunts? In the letter in- l ( stance the soil is taxed to produce the wood fifty trees instead of five. The cost of rchasing, planting, etc., all contributes toward swelling the contrast in the: amount paid out. In the first instance you: will be rewarded with satisfactory results-,.in the f latter there Wlli be disappointment, loss of ( time and money unl a failure to leulize when your orchard comesin hearing. The same results comparatively, though not so rapidly, manifest themselves with regard to the vine. Too close planting will sooner or later result disestrously. The proper dis‘ tunes for setting apple trees is from thirty to forty feet; tor the grape not less than fourteen to eighteen test for vigorous grow- ing vines. Of course varieties, methods of training, root pruning, top-dressing, etc., will 7 modifv these figures with regard to , grapevines, but better have them too far 1 sport than too closely crowded. FFHA mumsâ€"s AGRICULTURAL. Evils of Close Planting. One of the most common errors made when an orchard is plantad is to place the trees too near to each other. 'l'ney are small, and sixteen or twenty feet looks a long distance between them each way, no they are put in short a rod apart. 1f planted with the expectatiOn that half of A them are to be dead when they should be at a bearing age. all right; but: if expected to The buyers and sellers have, for the last two years, been emrcised over the question oi swimming weight versus the deeison of the scales. Americsn stock men, who were sellers. years ago decided that; the scales would save money. They are now general- iy found on the better class of our grain and stock farms. “’e are glad to “know that our English friends are coming to the same line of belief. The Agricultural Ga- zette, London, gives the following, which shows that there are stokmen on Great Britain who do not care to depend on guessing: A sale and purchase of lean stock of a somewhat unusual character was completed at Milton Fai , the seller being a well known Irish breeder, and the purw chaser a more celebrated ramdealer from} the Baverley'eidc. The two had attempted i to do business in the old way, namely, by a rice per head, but having failed to strike is srgain it was suggested they should agree upm A price {.er sconeâ€"live weight. The result was, they fixed the price at 4: 31 per 14 lb. The fifteen beasts were driven to the weighing machine, and the cattle Weighed in pairs and the odd one. The totallive Waighcwes execzly SOD scones, which. at the agreed price. made a total of £l70, or just 103 Rd per head more \han the beasts could have been bought at. ,_ The following testimony of a Berkshire County farmer on t1 3 value of apples as a milk food, does not agree with the them-y of some, but it does corroborate our own experience : I shall feed from 1,000 to 2,000 bushels of apples to my milch cows this fall, and expect u good profit by so doing, as I have proved in yer-rs than apples rate next to meal for cream and butter. I pick my apples when fully ripe, mix the. sweet and sour as evenly as poisible, and put them in a large heap in my barn, letting them sweat and beer-me fully mellow, but not rotten. Then I begin by feeding a peck to a cow once a day, and increase to half a. bushel a day to a cow, and then to a. bug- 1161. I have fed as high as 500 bushels in a fall to my dairy of 13 cows, with the very best of success and rofit. Try it, brother farmers. and you ll find it pays tar better than putting~ them in the cider barrel to be drank at the tirde or in the “loan. SELum CATTLE BY WEIGHT. PURE BRED STOCK. mexs Ann‘s. do he .re a no 1! of at to 97 m a. it, of of I is wanted on the lengtfi of time pear Ines will flourish and bear fruit that have come into baaring in a. few years after planting. Borne kinds of pear trees are slow in hearing. Do they last longer than the early bearing varieties? A: to longevity, even this continent knows of some remark- able instances. On the Canadian bank of the Detroit river, around Sandwich, are trees of the height of full‘grown elms, which, though planted about or befm’e the middle of luanlcentury, are still healsby and bearing large crops. Similar trees may be seen on the Amsrican side, nee I Wyandoste. Michigan. A tree still older than any of these is one planted ny Governor Endicoss, in Mnsmchnsetts 250 years age, Which en ‘1. ed it! Career- only this year. Another plum?- ed on Us pe Codjen yearn latenia still staid. ing. Year trees are permnuenn improve~ manta w the farm, and will bring in their yield of luscious food forthe table and profitI able fruit for the market when the farmer's grandchrkimn an growing old. If you scatter! some grain among straw or leaves and keep the hens at work. scratch- ing, they will lay better and keep- in better health Dead leaves can be turned to good ac- count in the poultry heme this winter ; so rake them up when they are dry, and store them away when they will keep dry. According to the Puzis “American Regis‘ meal-33.1159 "German agriculturists have dis- touvered a. use for the much despiseé horse 'cbeltbnt. They dry, nr rather bake them, and when thorougth ‘ree 8mm moisture, Md them-to their mule, sheep and pigs, also-to deey and boars, 1n the dried state these chestnuts crushed are considered both wholesome and nutritious, even mm so than acomm According to chemical analysis they contain as much as 64‘ [per cans. of proteins and' 4L£per cant of fatty matuer. Sheep are not givun more than) one kit'on per day pmiloh cattle lip-t0 five kilos, and animals for fattening as much Baa-ten kilos a. dayx Burnt corn is a most excellent thing to feed to ponItry, and is far superior to wood ohm-Coal, which however, hazy. won- derful eflVeeh in promoting the health of the fowln. For winter layers save the pallet: of the larger breeds batched in January or not later than March, the pallets of the small breeds that batched in April, and the hen: that moult aarly. A safe rule in feeding calves is to give just whaé they will lick up clean-and no more. It is also a good rule to apply to horses, cows, pigs, sheep and chickens. Some of the most expert poultrymen oc- casionally feed their fowls turnips in winter. They are not: peeled, but cut into quarters and thrown into the yard. The birds know what to do with them. To be certain of eggs in winter, hens must be ten months old, well fed and housed. Select the edrly hatched pallets and the early monlbing hens. Old hens will Lot lay until well feathered. An exchange says a course of twenty four lessons in poultry keeping would be of more practical benefit to the majority of farmers’ daughters than a course of twenty- (our lessons on the organ or piano. The duck should have a dry floor in winter. Some persons are under the sup oeition that water is just what the due requires, and that dampness is no injury, but the fact is when it is compelled to remain during the night on damp ground, it becomes chilled and gets out: of condition. The farmer who thinks there can be no- thing new in agriculture should remember that thirty or forty years ago his grand- father thought the same way. In in a fact, agriculture has made more advancement during the past ten years than in any other ten years 0! the world’s history. Good stock isdeuirable, but many dairy- men and framers think they cannot get the high priced pets. The best thing, therefore for them to do, is to selech the best, take good care of them, and improve their race by the use of a good bull. In this way they will soon have good average herds. It is for the dairymans interest to exer- cise as much neetness as possible in his busi- ness. Milk is one of the easiest things in the world to spoil from coming in too near proximity with impurities, and firstciass butter cannot be made from such milx, and it does not pay to make butter other than first class. An ingenious Kansas man is said to hive invented a fence to keep out chinch bugs. He takes a strip of flooring and E‘é’ts it on the ground with the groove side up. , In the groove he puts candle wick and uturates it with coni oii. The chinch bug. when it crawls up the side of the board and gets a nnufi' of the kerosene, retreats in disgust. Any young mam not now on afar-m, who desires to become a farmer. should hire out to the best farmer he can find and stay there two or three yeara. He will then get trained for his work and be paid for his training. He can still further hclp himself by a course of judicious reading and study during the winter evenings. Such a course for a young man of common sense and energy will fit him to manage a farm wisely and well Did you ever try working bulls? It is done successfully by many. It takes away their ferocity; gives exercise and stamina and yields a little income 1‘.) the owner. They can be Worked double or singly. Uee a collar similar to that of a horse, and he can pull like a horse, only it is best not to work him over three hours at a time, as he cannot endure so much as a horse. The easier way is to use him in a tread power ; here he can operate a chum, cut the hay or corn stalks, saw wood, pump wuter, turn the grindetone, or do any other work you may require done with tread power. The Princess Clementine of Belgium,ia sixteen years old. Her two sisters were married at seventeen. She will inherits van fortune and is said to be beautiful 3nd accomplished. Hams CEBSTNUW AGRICULTURAL NOTES. 901nm News. EAR Tans “A3 Fool). PROF. CHAS. (i. I). ROBERTS. On other fields and other scenes the morn- Lsughs from her blueâ€"but not such'fielde are these, Where comes no cheer of summer leaves and bees, And no shade mitigates the day’s white scorn ; These serious acres vest". no groves adorn ;. Bub giant trunks, blesk shapes thst once were trees, Tower naked, umassuaged ofrain or breeze; Their stern, gray isolation grimly home. The months roll over chem, and mark my change ; But when Spring stirs, or Autumn stills, the year, Perchamce some phantom leafsge rustlee faint Thro’ their parched dreamsâ€"some old-timer notes ring strange, When in his slender treble, far and clear, Reiterates the rainâ€"bird his complaint. I give :1 but my gifts are so mean,]" aam lem- Eng How sprdid and selfish a. vassal man be.. Of yore, he, who lay on a stone pillow, sleeping, While night-watchers, waiting, mvealbti‘ the Divine, .At morn pledged a. titha to the Hard, for » His beeping. Though meagre the gift, how much-better than mine l For life, in this em, with all its conditions, For Leve's INVth bestowments, that come- at my call, For labor, with boundless, eternal fruitions, “ The Wind 1135 Blawn mgr-Plaid Wm.” " Over the hills, nn’ far away, life over the hills an’ far away, O'er the hills, and o‘er the sea, The wind has blnwn my piaid frae me. My tartan plaid, my ae good sheet, Thaw keepit me free wind and west, An’ held me bein baith night an? day, In over the hills, an' far away. I blew: the kSeneficenn Gi'ver of all. “ The Elms,” Toronto. L. A Monmsew. I‘ five nay, not 1. by the grace- of his favor, .My life is the Spirit-life breafihing within, Yet, bound by the human, in fruith en- deavour I waste it: no compm the purpose of aén. I lover; but my lave it: She faintest Hahn-ring. 0! all the sweet ful‘nesa He measures to Though Mother may love m6 J ehovu‘r loves better Though Father, yet his love may fail to endure; Their love is the love 9 “The fleah”and the “ Letter, ' While Hi5 love is infinite, perfecs,‘and pure. ~ His Life is the life of alllito that exlsteth, Where footsaep of Splritor mortal bath trod ; All vital conceptions have come asbelistath; Withinâ€"at the source of a!!! beingâ€"in God ’J] The spirit of praise goes with and belongs with the spirit of prayer. It will often hap- pen in the experience of a much tried and tempted disciple that, even in the depths of his distress, praise to his God will be the readiest and surest road out of those depths and up to the heights of spiritual joy and exaltation. If he dwells in prayer only on his needs and sins and sorrows. he wfll miss one of the supreme delights of communion with God. Oh the other hand, if he turns his thoughts to the unnumbered evidences of the Father‘s love and care for him, to the saving power of the outstretched arm, to the promises of soccer and sustenance, ad for all these pours out his heart in gratitude, he will suddenly find himself out of the depth into which he allowed himself to fall, and his only prayer need be for a contin- nance of the very blessings which have evoked his heartfelt praise: the God we praise is the God from whom all blessings flow, and we cannot praise him too often or too much for his wondrous love in making us partakers of the richness and iulness of hilbleseing. One late November afternoon, I sudden heard a gentle rune. I could not see whence came the song, But, tranced, stopped and listened long ; And that drear month gave plhce to May, And all the city slipped away. The coal-curbs (‘eBBed their dimâ€"instead, I heard bluebird overhead ;. The pm. ueuts. black with. dismal ruin. Grew greenly to a country lane ; Plainly as I see you, my friend, I saw the lilacs away and bend, A blossoming appleorch 1rd where The chimneys from she foggv air; And wide mowu fielda of clover sweet Sent up their fragrance 3.: my feet, ; And once again. dear Phyllis set The thorn beneath, and trimmed her hat. Long looked I for my wimrd-bard : I found him. on the boulevard : And now my urban heath he cheers, Singing all day of eylvau years, Right thankful for the warmer spot,â€" A cricket: by July forgot l His There was a wind, it: cem’ to Inc, Over the south, an‘ over the sea, An' it has blawn-my corn an‘ hay, Over the hills, an’ far away, It blew my corn, it blew my gear, ll: neither left merkid nor steer, An’ blew my plaid. my only stay, Over the hills, an‘ far away. But; though ’t haswleft me bare indeed, An’ blawn my‘bouneb ofl'my head, There’s something hid in Highland bras, It hasna blawn myx sword away. Then o'er the bills, 311’ o’er the (isles, Over all England and through Whles, The braidswords yet shall bear the sway Over the hills and far away.” Heart is the heart of all henna that are tender Love is the love of a“ loves than: are true, mile' is the light of all beauty and splendor, mibbful compassion: each morning arenew. Praise and Prayer. A Street“. Minstrel» lhnnt Lana“ Soul Chords. SARA J. DUNCAN I will travel to sea the frog farmer “‘ living .on an income of $5,000," all from this frogs. In my long experience as a. pisciculrturist the lfrog baa been under constant notice; and l { have tried to feed them on meat and mussels 'without success. My belief in that frog cul- ;ture is a delusion, and that such a- thing as }a frog pond deco not exist, and unless some jgenius arises who can find a way to feed ‘his irons on beetles, flies and other insects, iwhicb, with some snails, constitute their jnatural food, there will never be a frog farm. The supply of frog} to New" York ’ market: comes mainly from Canada. and lplaces of sparse A population, where they 4 are not extensiver eaten. Forty years ‘1 ago Americana did not eat frogs, and every ' marsh in the country contained large ones. I Now they are almvst extinct scarcitieeiin the :‘State of New York, and do not breed and ; row idl‘ enough to ay to catch them. ilgthingpit {rebable filial; the hatrachiana, jlike the reptiles, are of long li‘e and slow I gwwth. and that a man would get very tired 7waiting to see a crop mature. Perhaps he i might wait ten.- yearu to get large ones, but ‘i never having raised a frog to maturity I can not say. The belief in their slow growth 3 is based; on the fact that many polywogs do f not get their logs the season theyare hatch- ‘ ad, but pass the winter in the tadpole state ; E this points to slow maturity. It wild be a surprising fact to many readers to learn that cold waters abound more in life than do warm waters. The schools of her- ringa about the coasts of J span greatly ex- ceed those of England, though the Japanese waters are the colder by at least twenty degrees. An idea. of their numbers may be had from Capt. H. C. St. John’s “Notes an Sketches.” I. In Msy and June this fish appears in in- credible numbars. The strains, bays and. creeks are alive with herrings. They are in such numbers that those nearest tha beach are pushed out of the water, and the shore for miles is thus kept constantly replenished with fresh fish; countless numbers of see- gulls. eegles, crows, besides foxes, wolves, and bears, find an ever ready meal, and the way the semgulls just picked the tidbit from the back of the neck, and left the remainder of the fish, showed how well they knew the suply was constant. It ie-no trouble to ther large (Quantities efi frog spawn and ham-h millions of tadpoles, nor to feeci the latter on méat andlvegetation, for they eat both. 'I-‘le enemies of the tad- psle; or polywog, are numerous, and large {raga will eat small ones. As aminstance of the latter fact, 1 once took a dozen large Am» erican buvllfroga to Professor Moore, of the Derby Museum at Liverpool, and they quick- 1y swallowed the small European-frogs that; were in the tank where he placed them. Even if in were impossible to feed the frogs on meat, which in is not, the babmchian is of slbw growth, and the lxalanc'e would be On the wrong, side of the ledger when they were. sawhova The Japanese sihlplv run a net straight out from the shore, one huuderd and fifty or two hundred yards along a. line of stakes. At the end of one net is a bag, into which the fish, on striking the net and working along it, soon find their way. When re- quired, the fisherman only htwe to go 03, haul the bag up, and opening the end let: the fish fall into their boat. “When they become frngs‘they live on a)! kind: of insects, and the only liking ] can see to make success sure is co prowl-.- insects in large quantities, enough to- support a great number of frog.” Aud‘ hex-'8 is where the impracticaplility of raising fragsliea. This species of herring isboth large and coarser than our own, The temperature of the Water in which they appear to flurieh to such an extraordinary extent averages thirty-nix degrees, whereas than in which our own fishes is found averages fifty-four degrees to fiftyveight degrees. - Mr. Green gave the results of two years' experience in which he gaehemd frog spawn and hatched it, but lost: hie polywoga and abandoned frog culture, but he eneouroged others to try it saying the “ difioulniea can be overcome by patience- ami persever- ance.” Yet he {unher‘said :: For the past four years this question of frog culture has given me some tranble in answering private letters from would-he {mg farmers, and in a. legacy leftbythe lnte Seth Green, who wrote an article on it; in the report of the New York Fishery Com. mission for 1873 This was widely copied,. and east year some imaginative reporter gives an account of a mythical frog farm which bee never existed. In 1875 this farm was located near bmi‘ahtawm Long Island, and I went there and found that there was no frog than in thee vicinity, nor was there any mnn living near the same place bearing the me givem The next year the npucryphai farm was located near Philadel- phia, and I had the same experience. Since that time I have anlv wasted postage in the pursuit of the fabled_ industry. Dr. Henry Miller, who made $3,000,000 in the manufacture of pills, Was buried at: Wilmington. Mans., Sunday, in a casket which cost $9000. Four coal-black horses carried him to a. tegnponry brick tomb whlcn cost $500, on a catafalque which cost: $2,000, and as the tomb the casket was placed in a big red Cedar box, which can; $250, held together by sixty big brass screws which cost $18. Owing to the fact; that his life ended rather suddenly another coffin equally magnificent, and intended to hold the: first, was not completed in time for service, When completed it Will have cost umucb M the other. and the two will be placed. one within the other, i ide qf an oblong glass case three~ inches ick, babe made at a cost of $300. The final resting plwce to be built: at a coat of 10,000, will be a. tomb in the village burying ground. In tthJstan “Journal” some weeks ago appeared a quotation {tom another paper re. garding a "frog farm” in which the extra“, gant statement was made that an income of $5,000 could be obtained from raising these inhabitants of the marsh. for ssle. Fred Mather, nupmintendent of the New York Fish Commission and fishery‘edifor of “For. est and Stream,” demolishes this assertion by an interesting article in the hat issue of of the “Forest and Stream”. Therein he writes : City Poebâ€"” “'bat a. very queer-looking I yellow weed that in.” Young Ladyâ€"- "Yellow weed! Goodness me! This is the beautiful ‘Golden rod ' that you raved about it your last poem." Frogs Not Profitable. Cold Water Fishes. Money in Pills. Sailing during winter tram Porn and every Thurs- day and Halifax every Saturday to Liverpool, and in Hummer from Quebec every Saturday to Liverpool, calling at Londonderry to land media and passengers l_<_)r__§ootland_ nud>lrelogd; also from Hammeretvjl Halifax and St. John's, N. F . bquwrpool fortnightly during summer months. The steamers of the 011w gow hues sail during winter to and Iron: Halifax. ortland, Boston and Philadelphia; and durlng sum mer between Glasgow and Monfirml' weekly; Glasgow and Boston weekly. and Glasgow and Phfladelphh fortnightly. _ For Irelghfi, passage, or other Information apply A.Sohumacher £500.. Baltimore; S. Cunard & Co. Halifax; Shea. &Co., sc. John's, N. 1",; Wm. Thump son & 00., St. John, N. 3.; Allan a; 00.. Chicago; Love & Alded. New York, 11- Bourller. Toronto: Allans. Rae & 00., Quebec: Wm. Brookie, Philadel- phia; H. A. Allen. Portland Boston Montreal. INCORPORATED l 855. Head flfl‘me: Tammi) 813., Toronto. Subscribed Capital, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . :3 4,500,000 Paid Up Capital. . . . . . . . . 2.5mm» Total Assets. . . . . . . . . . . 10,000,009 BE BOILER INSPEGTR‘DN and mu- anee Compan of Canada. Consulting Engineers an Solicitors of Patents, '1' 0 R 0 N ’l‘ 0 . 8. 0. Ron, Chis! Enn‘neer. A. Faun. Sec'y-‘l'ren . . EWBS. Foreircu lars address J‘ DOAN a son, Iowa to. Ont. CANADA PERMANENT Loan 85 Savings Company Seventmn graduates and oertmcakrdkmchers in the Faculty. Nesrfy 200 students Int year. Graduating courses in Literature, Music. Fine Arts, Commercial Science and Elocutimy Low rates good board, thorough work. MsLauzhlau Hall, confinq 320,000, new opau. Elegant Dormitories for 60- more studenta. Address PBJNOIPAL AUSTIN, B. D. mmm'nmm m Dumas m Boofln Felt. Slater-3’ Felt, Dealen'mz Felt, arpec Paper, Building Paper, Raofing Pitch, Coal Tar, Lake Gravel. The enlarged onuital and rrnources of this 0011'- puny. together wiih the increased facilities in his recently acquired for supplying land owners with cheap money. enable the Directors to mean will: promptness and at the lowest current rate or interes" all requiremems 'or Icons upon eatisinctory in! 6833's security. Appiimtion may be made to either of 5.113 Company‘s 10011 fpglsisers for t. v uvvu, vuu, vvv, auu 0110, according to stem » er accommodation. Intel- mdiate. 930; Round trip tickets_ $60. Steers e. 820. Round tripficketa, $40. For-further nrtiu mud to secure births. 2;;eg to BL E. MU ’RAY, General Manager, 1 Custom ouae Square, Montreal. or 60.6116 Local ‘szeum 1n the diflerenb'rwons and Cities. ALMA H. WILLIAMS & 00. Allan Line Royal Mail Steamspips SUFFERING {mm m. efleczs of early evu habits, aha result of ignorance and toll , who find themselves weak. nervous and exhaust ; also MIDDLB-AGBD and 0m Man who are broken down from the efiecte or abuse or oven-work, and in advanced lnleteel me- consequences of youthful excess, send (or and read‘ M. V. Lubon’s We on the Diseases of Men. The book will be sent sealed to any addteau o receipt of two 3c. stumps. Addrggs The Winter after the great fire in Chicago I contracted Bronchial affections, and since then have been obliged ’lo spend nearly every Winter South. Last Novemberwaa advised to try Scott’s Emulsion of cod Liver Oil with Hypophosphitea and to my surprise was relieved at once. and by continuing lie use three months was entirely cured, gained flesh and strength and was able to stand even the Bliz- zard and attend to business every day. c. T.,CHURCH!LL. Sold by on Man. and at.” Afhvr spending Ten Winters South: was Cured by Scott’s Emulsion. 1-16 Centre 86., New Yeti, June 25th.. 1888. } JjHERfl- Hi MASON-flange}; Dvl}elrt0r oronto. mmmm afiaem. (mice: 4 Adelaide! 5:. East. Toronto. M. v. LfiBON Wellin mu St. E. Toronto. Youjng Men THE LEADING CAN A- DIAN COLLEGE FOR YOUNG WOMEN. ’Sp Timpas, 7., out. SIabera 3nd Felt RUBFERS

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