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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 7 Aug 1885, p. 7

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ANIM A.LS WITH BRAINS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1885. A Tallahassee man cut the tail off his cat Io.st year, and her 111.st l~tter of four kittens have no tails. At Croton Falls, N. Y., a :rooster looks after a. large brood of chickens as tenderly as a veritable biddy, The maltese ca.t belonging to Squire Belleville of S1werton, Mo., went to the woods and brought in two young wild rabbits tha she now treats a.a well as the rest of her family. Rover is a dog belonging to William H . Tuttle of New Haven. After the morning pa.per, which is delivered at his master's store, has been read, Rover takes it to Mrs. Tuttle's mother to read, At Easton a. horse envied his master the comfort of a ha.mmock, and while the gentle· man was dining the horse left his pasture and took possession of it, The hammock had to be cut to pieces to get the animal clear. A ca.t belonging to. Judge Berna.rd of l'al· aha.ssee became such a nuisance that the Judge sent him to a new house fifty miles away. Tom ca.me w,alking into his old home a, few nights ago, nearly drowned and very weary, He ha.d walked the fifty miles back, swimming across several strca.me on the wa.y. The sparrows had been too well treated by a farmer near Youngsville, N . Y., for them to forget him, so when a big ha.wk swooped down on a fa.t hen and carried it to the top of a neighboring tree the sparrows went for him, They worried it until it released the hen and attempted to fly a.way, It finally fell ha.ck into the poultry yard with both eyes picked out and ao badly hurt th11.t it died, Scenting a Slaver. SALADS AND SA UO ES. A. Fam ""' Uhef'-Yaluable Opinlons-Sugur ancl Salt-A. "'\'fllite Snuee-~gg l!nlnd - Uelery- " Stock," "If you don't get a.ny thing else there you like, you will say you never tasted such sal· ads 11.nd sauces." So spoke a. wise friend to us as we were starting for a historic town in Provence, France, and while we could joyfully testify to many other delights in which that visit resulted, yet have we the most fragrant memories of the salads and sauces ot the little inn where we lingered for more than a. month that winter. It was such a very home-like place that we had not been there a.ny time before·we were on friendliest terme with the whole establishment, from Mada.me in her little ga.yly decorated "bureau" just off the courtyard, to Jean, the fat cook, who held da!ly confabs with us in one half-covered part of the portico nea.r the dining-room. Jean was quite a character. He had his own way of doing a thing ; for example, he nevex on these occasions came into the roQm; we have seen him quite indolent there at other times. On rainy mornings, our breakfast over, we would behold ~he prudent chef ma.king his way across the court;holding a large umbrella over his head, and not to be lured from his usual place. He would chat affably on various culinary subjects, asking our opinion on this and that in the moat compliment-i'ry manner, now and then giving us fragments, as it were, of the most delightful sounding recipes, At last a time came when he actually wrote down some of these. Later he told us tha.t .he knew he might make a fortune in England, for-as many letters he ha.d received testified-he could ge(enormoua wages in a club Qr some great nobleman's house, but Jean preferred hum· blEt laurels and lower eaminga in hie own Provence, And his fame did go a.broad. To the superior excellence of hie salads and sauces more tha.n one guest at the little Hotel Imperial ha.a subscribed, Jean assured us that the first consideration in a sauce was the a.mount of. sweet or salt naturally in the article to be dre!sed, for Hlt a.nd sugar, he observed, were far more important elements.than one believed until one thought with seriousness upon it. White sauces were his chej-d'ceuvre. A fine one for fish which we have since used successfully for certain vegetables and ragouts, was made as follows : Put into a porcelain stew-pan a good sized lump of butter ; when it melts add one pint of cream or rich milk ; let this heat through, and add a.good pinch of salt, some Cayenne pepper, and the heart of an onion chopped tolerably fine. Smocth to the consistency of paste two table-spoonfuls of ~our in a little cream or milk, and taking car;~ stir all the time, pour t~is io. slowly, Let it all boil up, kel'p on stirring, and then put it at the back of the fire. Have ready, well crumbled, the yolks of tw" very hard boiled eggs. Beat the&e well into the sauce, Just before pouring it over your fish or other article to be dressed with it, let it boil up once more, but taking care to stir well all the time. As a sauce for small new pota.toes, for boi!ed lobster, for chicken hash, veal stew, eto., this is excellent, but too much care can not be ta.ken in following the directions exactly, the melting of the butter first being very importa:nt, and to be recommended in all white or crea.m sauces, An egg salad can be made l!y boili.ng eggs eight minutes, and placing the YC?lks in unbroken b'\lls on a dish, pouring over them the above < sauce with one table-spoonful of s11.lad oil bea.ten into it. Garnish with sprigs ofpa.ri:iley and the white Qf the eggs cut in crescents. It is also ex· cellent poured over bits of toast which ha.ve been prevfously dipped in boiling water. Our Provence cook ma.de a delicious celery rnuce by boiling pieces of celery tender, and adding to some goc d stock a little w:hite wine. Then thicken this with:flour, a. little butter, and some pepper and ea.It. Boil up with the celery, and pour hot QVer the ar· tide, fowls, etc., to be dressed, AU rfutall white fish when dressed should have either a cream or a. white wine sauce, and for the latter atale champagne may be used to excellent advantage, but never when the sauce is to be served cold, He Preferred to Walk. "She's pretty hot, ain't she?" said a b ack· woods pa.sseuger, addressil'g the engineer of a Mississippi stea.rrer that was rarin g with another boat. "So-so," responded t:1e engineer, as he hung an additional wrench on the safety-valve cord tu stop the steam from osca.ping. " I reckon we'll overtake tha.t era.ft soon, "pursued the stranger. "That's about it, " returned the engineer, giving the cords another twitch and hallooing through the trumpet to the fireman to "shove her up." "Ono hund red a.nd ninety.five," hummed the passenger, looking first at the gauge and then at the boilers. " That's where she's rusticating," put in the engineer. The passenger ran his fingers thrnugh his h air nervously, and walked a.bout the decks for a·few minutes, when he came back to the mgineer and observed, "Hadn't you better leave that boat go?" " Can't do it . M ustpass her." "But s'posin' we should blow up?" "Well," said the engineer, as he peeped over the guard t o see how fast he was going, " if it is t he will of Providence for the boat to blow up, we'll have to stand by it." Then he lmllooed to the fireman t o coal, and give her a litt le more turpentine and oil. l:Fhe ne2d; moment there was a splash in the river l but before the ya:vl could be lowered, the man had succeeded m rea.ching the shore a._ n d ha.llooerl out, " Go on with the race. I guess I'll walk," ......... ~------ I In anoient times the swampy, spongy territory of the Netherlands waa bordered by thick forests, which prevent.ad it from being wholly washed away. The wretched inha.b· ita.nts of this watery waste were obliged to ~ ......... raise mounds for dwelling-places a.mid the Learniug the Thermometer. frequent floods. Strange as it seems, this "Thermometer'11 g )ne up considerable ra.ce of savages, living on fiah and spendin& since I passed here an hour a.go," he said, much of their time in trying to keep them- Come along young and old, great and small and get fitted putting his head in at the door of the jewelselves from drowning, grew into a great and and suited, too, in price and quali ty. er's store. powerful nation, Their hardships were "Oh, I guess not," said the jeweler, a.she the school of courage and perseverance that al ways keep the largest and best assorted stock of Hats, affixed his!magnifier to his.eye and picked up enabled them to surpass races placed an>id Caps, &c., so· come along and bring your friends with you. the works of a watch. more genial conditions. They made the "But I tell you it has, " cried the other overflowing rivers fertilize the soil of their excitedly, .vhlle he mopped his brow with country, which beo11.me a. garden of producthis handkerchief. ive industry. The ocean, that threatened to " I think you must be mistaken," 1nid the engulf them, they kept back by enbankjeweler a.a he picked up a. p11.ir of tweezers ments, while covering it with their com- In this department I keep all the latest styles and best and tightened a screw. quality, and my stock is alway~ well assorted. merce. But the chief glory of thie people "Miata.ken !" yelled the other ; "d'y. was not in their industrial enterprises and think I'm an idiot? Come out and eee." wealth, or in the triumphs of their arts Ties a specialty. Shirts of all kinds, Underwear, Braces, "I'm pretty busy," observed the jeweler and arms, but in the services which they Hose, Rubber Coats and R. R. Rubbers. a.a he brushed a peck of dust off the ma.In· :Bleeding at the Lungs. rendered to the cause of human liberty.and spring. H romoptysis is the medical name of this justice by theirresiatance to oppression, A.n early call solicited. "W ha.t'll you bet it hain't gone up ?" shout- disease. '.I'he present article is based on one ed the other as he danced into the store. in the Lancet, by Dr. ~eymour Ta.ylor, phyHobart Pasha.. " What'll you bet~?" sician fo the North London Hospital for BOWMAN VILLE. "Well, I'm willing to bet you a. dolh.r," Consumpt'on. The career of Hobut Pasha, just sent by NEAD'S NEW BLOCK, H remcptysis does not always indicatl con· England on a mission to the Sultan, has replied the jeweler. "Done ! Come out now and see." sumption. The bleedi"g may be due to been an eventful one. The second son of They went out t ogether. bronchitis or t o atempora.rilycongested state t he Earl of Buckinghamshire, he was born in 1823, and fin;t saw active service when " ·what do you think of that, now ?" he of some portion of t he lungs·. yelled ; "you ain't blind, are you? The there If it occur in t~e early stage of consurnp- still a boy in the expedition for suppressing mometer has gone up five degrees since we t ion, t he blood is simply exuded from some the slave trade in Brazilian waters, During looked at it before." congested vessels of ttie lungs, and is quite 1848 and 1849 he served as Lieutenant on "Pardon me," said the jeweler ; " the scanty, At a more advanceu ~tll.ge, aLtacks board the Queen's yacht. He waa mentionthermoneter is in precsiely the sa.me place occur at comparatively short intervals of ed when in command of H . .M. S. Driver at ,._ __, that it was when I hung it up this morning varying length. 'I 'he qtta.ntity is apt to b~ a the capture of Booma.rsund and became Post It is on thesa.me hook. I see, however, that gill or more, and issues from some large vessel Captain in 1862. Six yea.rs later he was a.pthe mercury has risen five tlegreea, a. change which has been eroded by the disease. pointednaval adviser in the Turkish service. in temperature which the thermometer faithThere is usually connected wi t h it a hard, In 1869 he commanded the Turkish fleet fully registers. A thermometer, my friend, irritating cough-"chopping" in itS char- .which was sent to Crete and brought to a neither rises nor fa.Ila. It is a measure which acter. In the last stage, the 11.ttacka are much satisfactory i~sue the dellcate diploma.t ic neindicates a rise or fall of the mercury. Please). less frequent, fr om the fact that the infla.m- gotiations which were ca.rried on a.t Syria. ha.nd over the dolhr because I am busy and i ma.tion has teuded to thicken and harden the He was subsequently promoted to the J haYe no time to fool. " . vessels. But they are profuse, exhausting, r ank of Pasha and became Inspector-Gener"I shan't p~y until some better authority . and greatly ala.rm the patient, from t_ heidea al of the Turkish navy. During the war he decides the matter." of impending death. contrived to elude the vigilance of the Rus"vYell, let us go a.nd find some better auIt should be understood, however, that sians a.nd at great risk aucessfully r an the thority. I'm willing to let my business · go death from bremoptysis is exceedingly rare, blockade of the Danube in one of the Sultan's for a. little while t Q prove that I am right. " Dr. Ta.ylor, during his entire connection gunboats. In 1880 he was named Muchir When la.st seen the pair were hunting for with a consumptive hospital, h as seen only and Na.val Aide-de-Camp to the Sul tan. Gen. Daniel Pratt, the greatAmerici).n travel- one death directly from it. '.l'he experience Four years ago he ma.rried Miss KathleenL. er, who is an emiment authority onallacien· tifi c questions. cf ot hers has been similar. In a majority of Hore, who belongs to an ancient Anglo-Nor- To the F armers of Darlington, Gartwright and surrounding T ownships : I hav e much p leasure in bringing before your not ice my Low DowN BINDER, cases the bleeding tends to stop 8pontan- man family which settled in Ireland as far which aft er three years of incessant toil an d experimenting, l can n ow Recommend eously. Indeed, in the early stage, it is back as 1160, and who has the rare distinc- to Y?U as a decided success, .an d 11:uarant cc 1t t o do as good work as any other Preparing Fruits for Oanning. Boil tomatoes twenty minates, a.dd a lit- rather beneficial as allevia.tiug the congestion. tion of being a countess of the Holy Roman machme made, and t o b e of lig h ter d raf t The agents of Eleva.ti ng Machines will tell As to treatment, Dr. Taylor decidedly con- Empire in her own right. Mrs. Hoba.rt you i t will n ot work. D on't be deceived. This is t l1e old story. When I brought tle salt; can hot. demns the use of astringents and of ice-bags, Hampden has devoted a. great part of her out t he Maxwell Reaper in 1877, what was said of it? Many farm ers will remember Boil ripe currants six minutes; amount of not only as ineffective but as harmful. He life to works of charity, and is now Presi- being told it was , too light, wotild never do the work, could not stand; but it has sugar to a quart, eight ounces, stood the test of nine years, an.d to day it s tands at t,h e head of the list as a single Boil Siberians, or crab apples, whole t wen · has, however, found much benefit frqm the dent vf most Qf the Catholic societes de bien reaper. I feel confident the Bmder I am n ow m anufacturing will be as great a. ty-five minutes ; eight ounces of s ugar to a application of hot fiannels to the chest, from jaisance at Constantinople. Hobart Pasha succees as my Reaper, and I would r espectfully ask intending purchasers to stands very high inthe favQur a.nd friendship the t op to the base. quart. give it a trial. Every mach ine guaranteed. . We may add : Improve the general health, of the Sultan, and is doubtless now sent t o Boil peaches whole fifteen minutes, using e-Call and see one on exhibition at R. HuTCHISON's, mv aO'ent, if possible, by country living, especia.lly a. renew that anti-Russian English a.nd Turkish Enniskillen, before buying any other. Yours respectfully, six ounces of sugar to a qua.rt. u "' Boil pea.rs from twenty to thirty minutes IPilk diet, a.nd pure air in the sleeping-room, alliance which existed under Beaconsfield, but has been broken under Gladstone. is-otwi MAXW ~ ELL - twenty for halves and thirty for whole MAXIMS roR THE THOUGHTFUL. pears-using six ounces of sugar to a qua.rt Her Grammar. can Qf fruit. Lovo, when it visits cld men, is like sunBoil whortleberries fiv.e minutes ; the It is a pathetic sight to watch the mean· shine upon snow ; it is more dazzling than amount of sugar to a. q ua.rt jar should be four derings of the childish mind through the in· warming. ounces. tricaoles of E nglish grammar, Little Jane We forget the origin of a parvenu if he Boil plums ten minutes : eight olmces of had repeatedly been reproved for doing remembers it ; we remember it if he forgets sugar to a qua.rt is needed violence to the moods and tenses of the verb it. - WILL FIND I N THllBoil blackberries six minutas vdth six The first love that enters the heart is the "to be." She would say" I be," instea.d of cunces of sugar to the quart. "I am," and for a. time it seemed as if no last to leave the memory. Raspberries six minutes, with four ounces The truth about our merit lies midway one could prevent it. Finally Aunt Kate Qf sugar to the qua.rt. between what people say dit to us out of ma.de a rule not to answer an incorrect ques· Boil cherries five minutes ; the amount politrness and what we say of it ourselves tion, but to wait until it was corrected, of sugar to a qu11.rt is six ounces, One day t he two sat together, Aunt Kate out of modesty. Fruit C!1.IJS ought .t o be tightened both beane over Where the int ~llectua.l level is low chal'h.\· bnsy with embroidery, and little J" ~;~~. fore and after the fruit cools. Never use ta.ns rise to distinction. They are like those her dolls. P resently doll society became poor rubbers if you want your fruit to keep rocks on t he sea.shore which only look high t edious, and .the child's attention was at. (1) A MAGNIFI CENTLY constructed machine, built from carefully selected materials, and one of great lasting qualities. well, The beat cans have porcelain tops. a.t low water. t racted to the embroidery frame. Keep canned fruit in a dark, cool place (in "Aunt Kate," said she, "pl~asc tell me (2) A BINDER with th e finest cutting apparatus in the world. BAR Those whQm experience does not render the cellar)with doors is just the thiDg to keep better are taught by it. t o seem so. what t hat is going t o be ?" warranted never to sag. Knives of razor steel. fruit in. Swing shelves in the cellar is no But Aunt Kate was counting, and did not (3) A BINDER well balanced, free frnm forward weight, and a TILT To endeavor to move by the same discourse place for fruit, Fruit get s too much light hea.rers who differ in age, _ sex, position and a.newer. Fatal word, be ! It was her old of great scope. and sometimes takes a fall, and, groatJs the education i3 to attempt to op en all locks enemy, and to it 11>lone could the child ascribe (4) A BINDER with the newest REEL out, handsome, strong and of fall thereof, as well as great waste of fruit with the same key. the silence tha.t followed, great capacity. and time. .Avoid all such calamities. "Aunt K ate," ahe persisted, with an hon- (5) A BINDER with the simplest and surest knotter in use, never The flavor of a detached thought depends Have a. cupboard for your fruit. Any ma.n upon the coµ ciseness w ith which it ia ex- est attempt t o correct her mistake, "please fails to tie, to tie tight and in t he middle of the sheaf. or boy that is handy with tools can make pressed, It is a grain of sugar that must be t ell me what that is going to ani ?" (6) A BINDER that can be folded in t wo minutes to pass through one good enough to put in a dark corner of melted in a drop Qf water, Still auntie sat silently counting, though any ordinary gate or barn door. your cellar. I cau assure you it will pay her lip curled with amusement. (7) A BINDER that folds without removing any Bolts;' Sprocket well for the trouble, Fruit kept in the dark Jane sighed, but made another patient An umbrella loan-society is said to be on Wheels, or anything. Simple, effective, su re. retains its fiavor better, Try it v.nd judge the point of being established _ in Berlin. effort. for yourself. "Will you please tell me wha.t t hat is (8) A BINDER with zinc-covered deck, and iron-capped elevator Bra.nch-offices will be opennd all over the ---- -~...~H>O IH----roJlers; no sticking nor winding in wet grain. city where members can obtain umbrellas in going to are ?" Ji naturally selfish disposition may be con. e:..se cf a sudden shower, Aunt K11.te counted on, perhaps by this (9) A :BINDER easily shifted backward and forward ; with new ex· tinual, but gentle influence be brought to tension Butt Board for short grain ; removable in long grain. time t\ct ua.ted by a wicked desire to ·know ~ Leather may have its color restored by a rejoice in another's happiness and to work what would come next. The little girl gath(10) A BINDER of remarkably light draft; easily handled by 2 horses. for it while a. na.turally generous heart may application of good blacking, and after ered her energies for one last and great ' · . brushing, a slight oiling a.nd an after dressing H ampton, 0 1·ono, be coldness-be 11hut up from tts own warm of gum tragacanth, I t will improve the effort. in~tincts. shabbiest leather, Agent fo r D arl'ington and C@·tivr ight. .&gent fo1· Clarke. "Aunt Kate, what ant that going to are?" ----...... ----- Many years ago, when slavery wa.s the rule and not . t he exception, vessels running a cargo were extremely clever in eluding capture and putting their pursuers off the scent. A good stQry is told of the flagshipWinchester, I think- going out of Simon's bay bound to the Mauritius. When ofi Cape Ha.ngklip, late one afternoon, a very rakish, suspicious-looking craft was sighted, carrying an unusual number of stay-sails, who upQn seeing the ma.n-of-war hoisted S panish colors and her number of Marryat'e code a.nd req uosted to be roported, She passed quite close, and was apparently a passenger ship of about five hundred tons burden, for as ehe neared them about a dozen la.dies, in very smart bonnets, veils, and para.sols, were observed to come on deck and wave their handkerchiefs with every demolllltration of cordiality to the officers of the flagship. She seemed to have also a large crew and was very clean and smart. Suspicion was quite disarmed, and she was logged as a passenger ship from Manila. to Cadiz. The admiral was a.lone in hia opinion that all was not right, remarking that the ladies waved their pocket handkerchiefs uncommonly long and vigorously t o a mere passing ship ; he also thQught the handker· chiefs unusually large, and further he mentioned that as she p11.saed he was fooking out of t he door in the stern gallery, and a faint curious whiff came dQwn on the wind, r e· minding him of something long pa.st. He could not remember for the moment of what it did remind him, but it suddenly Qccurred to him several hours after that the faint passing odQr, as the strange vessel swept by, recalled the smell of a slaveship which he ha.d navigated into port yea.rs before. And he w11.s right, This same vessel was taken, off the Havana, on her subsequent voyage, and proved to have been a Spanish ship from Fernando, Veloso river, in the Mozambique channel, full of slaves for Cuba, Her captain explained with delighted pride his meet· ing with the flagship off the 11ape, and how, seeing a. large man·Qf·war bearing down upon him, with the certainty of capture and no hope to escape ahould the ship's character be known, he adopted· the clever expedient, doubtless not for the firet time, of dressing up a number of his men in women's a.ttire,a ruse that was in this instance entirely successful. l HISTORIOAL ITEMS. jHAINES' CARRIAGE WORKS GEORGE C. HAINES, Proprietor, ope Innocent IV. (1254) publicly recom· · ,:, ded phll~sophic study instead of legal. } decree of Clement V. directed Hebrew, - -M.ANUFAC'fURER OF- re.hie and Chaldee to be taught in the mona.steries. Sylve11ter II. is said to have introduced Arabio numbers into Chrilltian . ... KING STREET, BOWMA.NVILL Europe. Has now on hand a nnmber of -..ehicles (arid is manufacturing e. gre11.t many more) of the newea. The Corees were a small tribe of Algonquin patterns and best flni8h , which I am offering for sale 11t the l~we·t prices consisteut on the coast of North Carolina, They were with due regard to workmanship and quality, 'l'ho f'1Jlowiog i~ a list ot the prlncip11l vehicles manufactured by me : allies of the Tuscar-oras in a.n a.ttack upons the English in 1711, and were defeated; and D ouble Covered Qar riages ... ......... ....... . ....... . .. ............... ...... . $200 Upwards, Single Phootons. ;·. ... ...... .. ..... .... .... ........... ...... . .. ...... . .. .... . , .·· 100 u they have sinoe disappeared from the face Qpen Buggy....................... . .......... ......... ......... ..... .... . ·. . ·. .· 70 u of the earth, a.nd their dialect is entirely Top Buggy. ....................... , . . ,... . ............... . .......... .............. 90 11 forgotten, CARRIAGES," SLEIGHS, ,CUTTERS, WACONS, &O., Institutions for idiots a.re of recent origi Lumber Wagons. .. ~·············· . . . ... . . ..... .. .................... . ... .... . ..... 55 11 in the United Sta.tee. In 1818 !\'fr, Galla.udet u Express Wagon..... . .......... . .. . . ...... .. ............ ........ . ................ 75 11 admitted an idiot boy into the deaf and Skeleton .......... ..... . ............... ,, ......... ..... ........ ,, ............. , .. .. 50 11 c lumb asylum at Hartford, and his mind Sulky·.····.. ....··.·.·.·····... ...·...........·.....·.··.····......·..···.·... .·..· 40 " was strengthened. The first asylum for euperlor facilities tor manufaoturlng carriages, I Intend to sell ver7 cheap for o ·~II idiots was opened in a wing of the Perkins Posee11&lng or approved credit , and by so doing I hope to greatly Increase my number o 86le11, WoWO. Institute in South Boston, la.t.e a1 : 1848. sell tbe wood parts only, or 1'be gearings ot buggle~ lr{>ne<l. Among the early efforte to bring about peace in France was a meeting of the clergy and Christians at Cha.rons 989 A. D., which .At the Shortest Notice, Painted and Trim,med. if Desired. solemnly anathematized all who plunder the At the Factory I also do Planing, Mat ching, Turning and Sa.wing with Circle, Band or·s r t Saws. and prepare·1111 kinds of lumber for carpenters nd others for building purposes. poor and attack the clergy, The establishOrnamental and Plain Pickets for fences in every style reQuired, made to order. ment of peace was held to be a. means of removing Divine displeasure, and in 943, a.fter a terrible pestilence in Limoges, the clergy ordered a fast, a.nd the "Pact of Peace " was concluded by the seigneurs and the duke. Democrat Wagon.............................................................. .. 65 1t Light Wagon...................................................................... 40 All Kinds of Vehicles Repai~ed ! SPRING HATS 12 Cases Spring Hats received at 1\1.[ A..-Y E Hat and Fur Store. J: <.' S GENTS' FURNISHINGS. MARKUS MAYER, nLCA..:X:.-WE::: I...a::C...'S LOW DOWN CANADIAN HARVESTER BINDER. _ A Complete Success-No Experiment. _____ - - - - - ~ . , . . _ . . . , DAVID FARMER·S BRANTFORD BINDER ',,_ JAMES M?.LEAN, ROBERT MOON,

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