Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 4 Jul 1889, p. 7

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The barred and plaided mohaira in ligh and bright colors are in high favor for little gir_1_s’ frogkz._ Glycerine mixed with spirit: is being used very largely for sharpening tools. The spirits are added in greater or leg quantity acccrding to whether the tools are fine or coarse. Weight not: correcu.-â€"Mr. Youngeouple â€"-What; is this cake you have made darling? Mrs. YoungcoupIeâ€"A pound cake, sweetest. Mr. YoungcoupIeâ€"-I think there must be something the mam-er with the scales. The result of researches of MM. H. Du- biei and I. Bruhl on bacteria shows that gaseous sulphuric acid has a. destructive ef- fect on germs contained in the air, espe- cially when saturated by the vapor of water ; that it: acts mainly on the germs of bacteria, and that when employed in a pure state for a prolonged period it ma prove fatal to germs even in pure air. his information should prove useful to those interested in the disinfection at hospitals, dwellings, 8m. Little Nan, of four summers, considering it her duty to entertain a lady who is wait- ing for mamma, enters into conversation. Nanâ€"“Have you got any little girls I” The callerâ€"“Yes, I have two.” Nanâ€"“D do you ever have to whip ’em 2" The callerâ€" “I'mZafraid I have to, sometimes.” Nanâ€" “What do you whip ’em with ‘3” The caller (amused) â€""0h. when thev’ve been very naughty Itake my slipper.” Nanâ€" (most feelingly, as mamma enters)â€"“Y-yo-you ought to use a hair-brush ; my mamma does and it hurts awfully.” CELLULAR CLorHINo.â€"This materialis now coming into use in England, and is said to be a success. It is woven out of the same material as common cloth, put into cells, the network of which is covered over with a thin stuff. Its porous quality allows the passage of the inside and outside air, giving time for the outside air to become of the same temperature as the body, and thus obviating all danger of catching colds and allowing vapors exhaled by the body to pass ofl’. The ordinary objection to cotton under-war is removed if made in this man- ner. A Dr. Evans takes credit for discovering a new test for the freshness of eggs, which consist of holding them to the ear and vio- lently shaking them. If not fresh an egg will rattle. There appears to be little novel- ty in this suggestion, as the practice is an old one. It is now claimed that an inialible test of vitality in an egg, true freshness, is to hold the broad end of an egg, gently pressed, on to the tip of your tongue. If fresh it will be distinctly warmer than the tongue, while the small end will be as distinctly cold. If the egg is not fresh both ends are cold on account of losing its vitality. Baldheadâ€"“ There is a hair in this soup." Waiterâ€"“ Probably some of your own have dropped in." Baldbeadâ€"” I haven't a. hbil‘ on my head.” \Vaiterâ€"“ That‘s what made me think it might: have got: into the soup."â€" Living skeleton (only one in America, at a. dime museum ) â€"“Theee folks make me tired. ” Sympathetic visitorâ€"“ In what way 7” "Here I am earning $500 a. week as the greatest living skeleton. yet hour after hour, day in an’ clay out, one old woman after an- other stops an’ china and chine at me about the things I ought to eat to get fat.” The most valuable oat s-eye in the world has just reached Sweden. It came from Ceylon and was found by a laborer loading a cart with earth. He sold it for thirty rupees, and it then in its uncut state weigh- ed 475 carats. Afterward it was sold for 9.000 rupees to a merchant, who had it out. Its present weight is 170 carats. and it is insured for 30,000 rupees. We are told that cat’sâ€"eyes of good quality now sell for almost as much as diamonds. Arthurâ€"“Yes, indeed, if you happen to send us any poetry that we may choose to accept we‘ll put your name after it. By so doing we may escape a deal of trouble by letting our readers know who to kill." The Mennonite delegation who have been looking for hand in the North-West: have selected Calgary for their future home. and have asked the Dominion Government to re- serve for them ten townships for five years. The native population of Benares, India, cannot have very advanced. ideas as to the importance of sanitation. as one {hundred thousand of them have signed a mon- ster petition to the government protesting against the proposed new drainage and improved water supply. It is not necessary to buy corn cure. Men and women should remember that Putman’s Painless Com Extractor is the only safe. sure and painless corn remover extant. In does its work quickly and with certainty. See that the signature N. U. Polson & Uo. appears on each bottle. Beware of poison- ous imitations. Paper has long been made from woodpulp, but it is now mauufmnured From the saw- dust refuse of mills Wneu tax-rad and dried it makes an admirable sheeting for houses. Ayach‘J was recently launched on the The.sz by electrical appliances, which enabled all the support: to be removed on the pressing ofa butbou, and the vessel glided into the water without the slightest hitch. 'lhe Grocer- Good mornirg, Mr. Oaboake. Wham brings you back to the city so soon? Farmer Oetoekaâ€"Wml, I’m going to have a good many more summer boarders than I expected, so you might send me ten more cases of canned vegetables ! A“submarine bridge” is proposed between Elsinore and Helsingborq, to be incased in a double tube, having the outer skin iron and the inner one steel, the space between the shells being filled with concrete. It is proposed submarging this bridge sufficiently to allow ships to page over it. Application has been made for a. patent for an electric apparatus by which an in- stantaneous photograph is taken of a burglar while he is engaged in his nefarious oper- ations. The moment) he touches the doox~ of the safe, or any other place to which the tell tale wire may be fastened, a. correct photo- graph is taken. “ You shouldn’t be so uncharitable toward vour fellowmen,” said a. travelling man to a friend who had been railing at human nature in general. “ Remember that all men are your brethren.” “ Yes,” was the reply, “ I do ; and I’ve got a. tremendous lot of mighty mean relations.” MISCELLANEIHTS. For the Babies Among our rough forefathers, had elec- tricity been known, and thought of as a mode of death, it would never have been dis- cussed whether or not such a method was not inhumanly cruel. Would it prove ef- fective? That would have been the only thing thought worthy of debate. Was it painful enough, unusual enough, appalling enough to prove a deterrent from crime, an atonement to the majesty of offended law, and a solemn warning to the community. If it were all these then it was no matter how cruel it might be, what agonies of mind and body its infliction might occasion to the unfortunate victim. Such a being would have been regarded as one whose life was forfeited and who had, therefore, no rights which humane sentiment was under any obligations to consider. Nowa- days, however, it is different, and we find numbers of busy men showing them- selves‘not too busy to put in a plea in the name of pity and humane feeling, in behalf of a criminal whom they all believe worthy of death. It appears that the law which made electricity 9. mode of capi- tal punishment in the State of New York was passed after consideration of certain experiments made by one Harold P. Brown, an electrician, on dogs and other lower ani- mals. The opinions of other experts do not appear to have been sought. And yet if we are to believe the New York papers the great majority of the leading electrical ex- perts in the United States condemn Mr. Brown’s experiments as misleading, and pronounce it an outrage that such informa- tion should be accepted as a basis whereon to base a new plan for taking human life. One gentleman said in answer to an inter- viewer that animals are much more suscept- ible to electric influence than human beings are, another said he feared Kemmler would be badly mutilated before he would be kill- ed, and none of them would venture the opinion that electricity would certainly prove a painless mode of death. All which goesto prove that if Kemmler’s execution takes place as agreed upon, it is quite possible there may be some tragical scenes. First experiments are always dangerous. Mr. B. W. Potter, a special correspondent I of the Worcester Spy. writing to that paper from this city, June 14, says :â€"â€"0ne of the most striking things about Toronto is the rapidity of its recent growth in wealth and population. was under 30,000 ; ten years ago it was less than 90,000, and today it is estimated at 180,000. This remarkable stride in popula- tion has been equalled by its strides in the erection of new buildings and the establish- ment of new industries. Wherever one goes in the business part of the city he sees fine new blocks in the process of erection, and in the suburbs whole sections of territory are being rapidly covered with substantial and beautiful dwelling~houses of stone and brick. The streets are very wide and straight, many of them being eighty to one hundred feet wide, and usually there is a grass plot, with shade trees and sometimes flowers. between the sidewalks and the driveway. The cause of the city’s wonderful advancement may be attributed to its splendid location for a com- mercial emporium, which makes it a great railway and waterway centre, and the mar- ket place of the rich Province of Ontario and the great North-West ; and also to the ability, energy, and sbrewdness of its busi- ness men, some of whom are Americans, and partly also to its attractions as a place of residence. The shaded streets, the parks, the cool breezes from the lake, its literary and educational advantages, and its accessi- bility from the great lakes and the St. Law- rence river, and the many summer resorts in this part of the country, all combine to make a summer or a winter residence in the provincial metropolis a joy and delight. In 1850 the populationl i The case of the man Kemmler. condemned in the State of New York to suffer death by electricity for the crime of murder, is ex- citing a great deal of attention, and this chiefly because in the opinion of very many «xperts the mode of death is not only novel but unnecessarily cruel. It is convincing proof of the changed order of things under which we are living that there is a strong re- pugnance to inflicting unnecessary pain even on the most guilty criminals. Oar sensibil- ities are much keener and more tender than those of our forefathers, our powers of im- agination more active, and our abhorrence of everything like cruelty so powerful as to be almost indiscriminating. This tendency, creditable as it is in its essential nature to our humanity, may easily be pushed to an extreme. It often is pushed to an extreme, and we are afforded the unpleasing spectacle of ruffian criminals re- ceiving better treatment at the hands of un- intelligent sentimentalism than they could ever have expected had they remained stead- fastly in the paths of rectitude. But aside from such morbid developments it is surely matter for rejoicing and thankinlness that our natures have become so refined that we inevitably shrink even in the interests of justice from compelling those who have of- fended against our laws from suffering more pain than is absolutely necessary. In older and more callous days, the more pain the law-breaker was made to suffer so much the better, and the general opinion was that for certain classes of crime he could not possibly suffer too much. Hence the atrocious forms of punishment the recital of which makes our blood run cold. and leads us almost to doubt whether such things could really have taken place among men who called themselves Christians and were our own ancestors. A woman in Galion raised a splendid mus- tache and a beard nearly a foot long. A young man, with more business than love in his heart, waitzed along and married her. After the honeymoon he took her in his lev- ing arms and hinted delicately at the untold wealth she could accumulate for herself and the royal style she could keep him in if she would accept a dime museum engagement. But she only stroked her long beard, and, raising her soft, liquid eyes to his, said that she would be hanged if she was going to make a pinny-pinny-poppy-show of herself to support a great big lazy lubber like him. At last accounts she was dancing up anddown in front of a mirror, waxing and curling the ends of her mustache and smoking a strong cigar to soothe her outraged feelings, While the cruelly deceived husband was running from one lawyer’s office to another, trying to make arrangements for a divorce and meanwhile had taken to strong drink. A City to be Proud 01. Death by Electricity. Shattered Hopes. oi the Company was then held The Secretary having rend the notice calling the meeting. on motion the minutes of last Annual Meeting were taken as read, and confirmed. The President then read the DIRECTORS‘ REPORT : It afiards your Directors much pleasure, in sub- mitting the foliowin: statement of the afiairs of our Company. to be able to report to the members than the next result of the business transacted durinr the year 1888 exceeds that of any previous year. The new assurances issued, amount to $2,518,650, under 1,905 policies, and the total amount in iorce on 31st December is $12,041,914 under 9,398 policies. The regular progressive increase of the past ten years in our Premium and Interest Income has been fully maintained. Methods By Which Man-lose Will Never Become a Failure. In the first solitary hour after the care- mony take the bridegroom and demand a solemn vow of him, and give him a vow in return. Promise one another sacredly never, even in jest, to wrangle winh each other, on whatever pretext, with whatever excuse it: may be. You must continually, and. every moment, see clearly into each other's bosom. Even when one of you has committed a fault. wait not an instant, but confess it freely: And as you keep nothing secret from each other, so, on the contrary. preserve the prinacy of your house, married state 5 nd hear from father, mother. sister, brother, anus. and all the world. You two, with God’s help, build your own quiet world. Every third or fourth one whom you draw into it with you willforma party,aud stand be- tween you two. Promise this to each other. Renew the vow ab each temptation. You will find your account: in it. Your souls will grow as it were, together, and at last become as one. Ah, if many a young pair had on their wedding day known this secret, how mmy marriages would be happier than, alas ! they are now. I its Nineteenth Annual Meeting, in Waterloo, on May 23rd, 1889. though not quite as large as in some lormer years, was, as usual, both influential and representative . ' The President, I E Bowman. Esq , M P. having taken the chair, on motion the Secremry oi the Com- pany. W H Riddell, E:q, acted as Secretary 0! the Sp_epialand_oi the Annuel Meeting. _ _ 'The provisions of the Act passed at; the last session of the Dominion Parliament to amend the Company’s charter, having been explained by the chairman, on motion it was unanimously approved of, whereupon the Special General meeting was dissolved. THE attendance of members of this Com any at 7 its Nineteenth Annual Meeting, in aterloo, Our total assets as at 3lst December last amounted to $1,313,853 and our surplus over and above all lia- bilities has reached the handsome sum of $90,337.09. which is a. very satisfactory showing after the liberal annual distributions which have hitherto been made. A portion of this surplus will be held in hand as a provision against future reductions in the rate 0! interest and other contipgenq 9.» ONTARIO MUTUAL LIFE. The policies in force at the close of the year have been valued by the ofli ters of the Government Insur- ance Department and the reserve required to be held has been certified as correct by the Superintendent of Insurance for the Dominion. After the regular annual Audit, the Executive Committee of the board again cereiully examined in detail all the securities embraced in the general statement of asscts and found them correct and in proper order. The de- tailed statement prepared and dulv certified to by your Auditors is herewith submitted for your examin- ation and disposal. You will be called on to elect four Directors in the lace of B. M. Britton, John Marshall, Francis 0. rune and J. Kerr Fisken, whose term of office has expired, but who are all eligible for re-electiov. On behalf oi the board, How a CabYe Mesage is Received Only the ieeblest currents should be used on submarine lines, since heavy pulses which could be employed with impunity on land lines, if they did not soon destroy the cable- covering would, at least, tend to develop faults which otherwise might long remain latent. Defects in cablecovering that other wise may not lead to harm admit moisture, and hence under the action of a strong cur- rent, oxides are quickly formed, destroying insulation. The necessary use, in ocean tele- graphy, of the lightest currents has led to development of a class of recording instru- ments remarkable for delicacy of actionâ€" notably the Siphon Recorder, which indi- cates the electric impulses by a wavy ink-line on a tape, and the Reflecting Galvanometer, which causes a spot of light to move from right to left in a darkened room. With these recorders and thirty cells of battery, mess- ages sent across the Atlantic are telegraph- ically reproduced in ink at the rate of from twenty to ttventy-five words a minute. each way, the cable being duplexed. But for electrostatic induction a single cell of battery would suffice for transmission irom the earth to the moon, if those bodies couldbe connec- ed by a wire of the size used in ocean cables. Our expense account 10r1888 is about $2,000 lass thnnthatof1887, while the business transacted is considerably greater; and the ratio of expense has been reduced to 18 1-5 per cent, showing a. reduction off} per gent. :15 Icompaye'd wi‘th the previous year. Dr. von Lauer, ex-surgeon general of the German army, who died a short; time ago. was years ago appointed court physician by old Emperor William. In this capacity the was obliged to visit the ruler twice each day and subject him to a rigid examiaton. The phyiscian gained great control over his man- ter in the course of time, and was, in fact,the only person whomhe would obey. The empe- ror often spoke of his tyranny in a playful manner,but was evergrateful for his thought- fulness and care. There is little doubt what the great age which the monarch attained was due in part; to the strict rules of diet and exercise which Dr. von Lauer always enforced. ADVICE T0 BRIDE AND GRO0M Special and Afiualmeting -OF THEâ€" IsAAc BOWMAN, Pres. Printed copies of the Financial Statement and Auditors’ Report ior 1888 having been distributed among the members, the President moved the adop- tion of the various report;. He congratulated the policy holders on the favorable results of the year's operations, obtained at a lower ratio of expenditure than in previous years and lower than the expense ratio of any of our Canadian competitors, with one ex- ception only; while the volume of busintss has been well maintained and its quality improved. The new business of the curent year was much in excessoi that written during the same period in any previous year, evidencing the continued popularity of the Company and warranting the hope that the next report the DireotO‘s may have the privilege of submitting will be the best ever experienced in the history 01 the Company. He had no hesitation in stating that The Ontario was never more deserving of the support and confidence of its members and of the patronage of the insuring public than it is at the present time. B M Britten, Esq, Q C, James Trow, Esq, M P, Joseph Ward, Esq, of the wholesale firm of Messrs Ward, Carter 8:, Co, Montreal, and others ably sup- ported the motion, which was adopted amid applause. Messrs Jackson and Scully havingbeeure-appointed by vote of the members present auditors for the cur- rent year, the Scrutineere appointed to take up the ballots having reporned the re-eleotion oi the retiring Directors, and the customary vote of thanks to the Board, the Officers and the Agents having been ten- dered and responded to, the meeting was brought to a. close. The Directors met; subsequently and re- elected I E Bowman, President. and under the amended charter elrotad C M Taylm 1913 Vice and Robert Melvin 2nd Vice- Preeidentpf the Company for the ensuing year. THE ANNUAL MEETING Dr. Von Lauer. All branches taught.-â€"â€"Instrumental and Vocal music; Elocution, Languages. Scholarships, certificates,diplo- mas. Free Theory, Violin, Concerts and Lectures. Next Fall, organ students, besides the use of several complete church organs, can have lessons. practice and recitals upon a GRAND CONCERT ORGAN, built cxpressly for the Conservatory, in Association Hall. U Sailing Weekly between MDNTBEIL and LIVERPOOL Saloon Tickets. $40, $50, and 360, Return Tickets, $50, $90 and 8110, according to l-teamer and accommodation. Intermediate $30. Round Trip Ticketq, $60. Steerage, $20. Apply to [I ll. MURRAY, General Manager Canada Ship- ping (Jo , 1 Gus-mu HOUSE SQUARE, MONTREAL, or to Local Azenta in all 'l‘uwnn and 0mm cor. Yonge St. and \Vilton Ave., Toronto. Penbertlly Injector (10,, Detroit, Mic h Factories, Windsor, Can. and Detroit, Mich. Mention this paper. SUMMER NORMAL TERM, JulySto Aug. m. FALL TERM OPENS Sept. 4. Send for free CaKefldar. _Addrg EDWARDAFISHER, Director, AUTDMATIQ SAFETY. ELEVATORS GardiBu- EIZVEtJr Worksfl’vfiafafia afien'utiâ€"e‘eis: HAMILTON. ONT. kEITCH g TURNBULL n inn Elnvnfmr rkn Pam! an Imnn "treats. Merchants, Butchers and Traders Generally. 20! us. Cash furnished on Satisfactory Guaranty. Address; ALL THE WURLD [IVER Johnston’s Fluid Beef '. 10,000 in use in Canada; 20,000 m” in use in the United States. They are simple and cost less than other makes. while performing the same work. They start easy at 25 lns. steam and work to 150 lbs. ; Lift water 18 to 20 ft. and work from a head as well. Automatic and restarting when current to boiler is broken. Send for circular to Main Office, Is used as a. STRENGTH-GIVING FOOD for INVALIDS, CONVALESCENTS, Stained GlaSs FARMS - M "ANITA Sailing during winter from Port and every Thera- day and Halifax every Saturday to Liverpool, and in summer from Quebec ever? Saturday to Liverpool, calling at London ierry to and mails and assengen tor Scotland and Ireland; also from Bait more, via Haliiax and St. John’s, N. E, to Liverpool iortn htly during summer months. the steamers oi the lu- ow lines sail durin winter to end from Halifax, ortiend, Boston an Philadelphia; and dnrln sum mar between Glasgow and Montreal weekly; G asgow and Boston weekly. and Glasgow and Philadelphia lofinlzhhm. For treighfl, passage. or other lnlormnlon apply to A.Shumaoher&00.. Baltimore; 5. Cunard I: ()0. Halifax; Shea h 00., St. John's, N. E; Wm. ’rhomp sons: 00.. St. John. N. 3.; Allan a 00., Ohio: 0. Love a: Alden New York, 11- Bourller, Town or Minna, Rack 0., Quebec: Wm. Brookle. Phllhdel- phla: H. A. Allen Portland Boston Monbreal M’GAUSLAND & SUN, Scottish, Manitoba and North-West REAL ESTATE 00., LIM. W G Akin. Mgr. 357 MainflSt, Winnipeg Lands in all pa.th of the Province. Low Prices. Easy Terms. Lists Sam and Fullast Information Fur- nished on Application. Send us your name and we will mail you our descrlpbive catalogue. Allan Line Royal Mail Steamslflps W. (7. MACDQNAIJD, ACTUARY. TORONTO “MPH HON. G. W. ALLAN - - PRESIDENT. I000 Total Attendance first 2 years. flanfeCeration iLife OVER FOR CHURCHES, DWELLINGS, AND_PUBLIC BUILDINGS. BAYER LIN E STEAMSIIIPS. and for ATHLETES when train- ing, and in Domestic Cookery for making Soups and Gravy. wanfl a GOOD MAN in your locality to pick up gafigguycggua sad aim; games: ’16 King St. W.. Toronto. CHARTER. HON. G. W. ALLAN 87 Northeote Ave.. Toronto. Ont GALF SKINS ~r FOB CIRCULAR ADDRESS. THRESHING BELTS, Guaranteed not to crack, split, putt, break or part between the plies. Send for descriptive circulars and prices; The Waterous Engine Works 00:, Ltd., Brantford. $3,000,000 O- S- lE".A.(3-IEI1 J. DOAN &. 00., THE HOME COMPANY. Artificial Limbs IN MANITOBA The Penberthy IMPROVED Automatic Injector HYDE PARK. Vermont. 17.8. OF MUSIC. AND CAPITAL SIR. W. P. HOWLAND, President. WM . ELLIOT, VICE-PRESIDENTS. BEATTY, guAancK, BLApKSIOOK & cm. CHOICE FARMS FOR SALE IN All. PARTS OF Parties wishlng to purchase improved Manitob- Farms. from 80 acres upward? «nah immediate possession. cell or wnta to G. l. HIAULSON. Mo- Arthur‘s Block, Main am, Winnipeg. Information furnished tree of charge, and settlers assisted In making selection. MONEY TO LOAN The Farmer, The Stocknmn, The Dinner, A Empire Opened for Settlement. Comprising lith agrinutnrnl and grazing lands, gold silvur, copper; lead, iron. and coal mines. Climate unsurpassed. Made easy of access by the ST. PAUL. MINNEAPOLIS, 85 MANITOBA RY.. which plnces in service. beglnning Nov. 10th. a train equip- mn-nt unexcelled, furnishing splendid Day Unacnes, Palace Sleepers, Free Colonist Sleepers and Superb Dinlmt Cars of latest design, running train through solid from St. Paul and Minneapolis to Great Falls, Helena and Bruits, Montana. For maps and general information inqulre of your own Ticket Agent, or F. 1. Whitney. Gen'l Pass, and Tk’t Agbu St. Paul, Minn. ; J. M. Huckln's. 4 Palmer House Block, Toronto ; or, V. (7. Russell. 8 Masomc Temple. London. m MANITOBA Waterworks, Hotels. Colleges Pumping for Railway Stations,‘ Fire Protection,J Irrigation, Tannerles, Breweries. I Sewage. Mines; Draining Low Lands I These cele brated Wind mills are made! tram oneman to; forty horse-pow-‘ Ill} ABOVE PALACE at the ST. LEON SPRINGS. Quebec, is now open for the reception of Vlsltors; 300 comhrmble zooms. Baths in Nature’s virgin, life-toning, charming ele- ments, hot or cold. Rauasnndemte, amusements plenty and entlcing. Write for particulars. $0 Springs, or to Agencies at Toronto, Meal, or at Quebec. Mention this paper Institutions, Gardens. Green Houses, Town & Village 800M D,ARGADE, - TDRUNID, CANADA (INC08PORATED) A Mutual Benefit Association. SOLID INVESTMEITâ€"Bv paying to the above Assccsatiou ONE CENT PER DAY, 3 person aged twenty-two, and and two cents per day a. person aged forty-four can secure Five Dollars per week while disabled through sickness or accident, also for two and three cents per day, persons aged as above can secure for their dependant. Five Hundred Dollars in in event oi denh. Pumping Water for Stock. Farm Buildings, Mansions, VilIaResidences rublio Provident Life and Live Stock Asso’n LIVE 8T0 CK OWNERS can provide against loss bv death through disease or accident of their stock. at any rates. Those interested send for prospectuses etc. Reliable Agents wanted in unrepresented dia- mcts. 7 7 r HALLADAY STANDARD WINDMILLS MONTANA’S WEALTH ‘ Barristers ’and Souclton. Ellington St, 00:. Church. (over Bank of latch” For supplying constantly pure and fresh water for the lollowing purposes, yxzâ€" V II I- I iovV'I-‘aio'or Intorestoi if. _ class security. Apply to E. HOOPER. J. K. MACDON'ALD, MANAGING Dmlcrox. WILLIAM JOKES. Managing Director. A1 Ommnm Runs 0? INTERIM onugm Pinup (10.. TORONTQ, ON'h‘L The Merchant, m, 'l he Laban-er. The Bunker, The Mann menu-er. CHIEF OFFICE, A 18! A la]- 0 amount ofTRl EU nfps 9: 1.0m 9‘ a AWAITS TORONTO, 0NT., CAN'ADA. ex. . They at perfectly con trellableingale and uniform in speed. Geared Mills tor chafieumug not pulping, threshing, saw. ingwood,grlnd- int; corn, etc, etc. Also manu- facturers“ lead grinders,hayinz (tools. iron and iwcod pumps, 1am! a full line of Railway, Town. .Farm and Oma. mental Water iSupplv Materi- als. Cahalogue {and Pdce Lists, iwlth reflex-ewes. [mailed free on {application 60 ASSETS

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