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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 5 Feb 1886, p. 3

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The Drunkard's Raeeit Wean. FORFIGN EVBOES. f A TELEGRAM A. RilRITY. HEALTH. .A CARD.-To all who are s uffer in.,. from:· (SuDg;to the air ol " Castles In the Air.") the errors and indiscretions of youth, A wee bit raggit laddie ganl!'s wan'rln through the M e:i:'·'O'e crop of Indian corn, unlver· THE E XCITEMENT BROUGHT ABOUT BY A ner vous weakness, . early decay, loss of Heatin~ and Ventilation. "Da.nver to Horses· . street, NICE YOUNG MAN's MESSAGE m'.1-nbood, &c. , I will send a recipe that Wadln' 'mang the enaw wi' his woe 'haoklt feat, In the whCJle ra.nge ofpractical sa.nitation sally u~od In making tortillas , amount!! Farmers as a ·class, though very suspl· Shlverln' I' tho cauld blast, gract!n' wl' the pain ; to about, one·ninth that of t he United ' will cure yon FREE OF CHAltGE. This olous are after all very careless in many Wha'e the pulr wee callan ? he's a drunkard's raggit per haps, there ls no subjec t fraught with Sbatt>s. In some pa.rte of the country A very n ice young man spent most of great remedy was discovered by a mission· more difficulties than tha.~ of proper heating wean. things whore a. little o:}re might be well re· the hot days of la.st Augusb at a wind- a.ry in South America. Send a. self· and ventilation in olima.tes where there three crops a year may be ma.de. p!'.id. Although horai:s a.re not kept In such He stii.ns at Ilka door, ~n' he keeks wi' wistlu' e'e, must neoessa.rily be much. dependence on arThe largest price by the ~qua.re inch swept retreat ln i;he Atlannlo Highlands of addressed envelope to the REv. JosEPB'. '\ \rge herds as other kmds of st<Jok they are To see the crowd aroun' the fire a· laughln' loud wl' tificial heu.t, ever paid for a.palnbing was lately given New Jersfy . .Atlantlc'Htghlandl!, after T. I NMAN, Station D, N ew York City. 46y !(lee, ,ire exposed than a.ny other kind to any First of all, it ls to be regretted that by by the Dao d' .Aumale for the "Three t he summer h as gone away, is a t ired Utonta.gious disease that ma.y be abro/;\d In . But he ~:~r1~~n:·nturo ban, thoul!'h hie heart be o'er In the theatre at Marseilles a gentlema.n the laud. On thIS subjeot the Spirit of the }'or he maunna play wl' ither bairns, the drunkard's custom so much of dependIloe is placed Graces," by Rapheal, from L ord Dudley's tle village of 500 souls. Nobody ever upon artificial heat. The body itself le a gallery. The prfc~ was $ 125,000, or, ~s comes there and n obody evar goes away seated in tbe stalls drew a revolver ftom his F &rm sa.ys : rag~it wean. pocket and blew out his brains, He was in great heat producer and heat regula.tor, and ' Vhen we consider for '!. moment the num· Oh, see the wee bit, balrnle, bis heart Is uncou !ou, has resources and ca.pa.cities for the·provision ·the picture ls only seven inches square, during the winter months. The village love wlth an aotress who w&s performing ber of dlse11oses of a contagious ne.ture to The sleet le blawln' cauld, and he's drouklt thtough and $2,500 per inch. goes to sleep as soon as the le2ves begin while the deed was committed, regulation of heat that are not enough and through, which horses are subject, and the careless Mis1 Florence Warden and her com· to turn, and hibernates until t he Ilea ab ""'·---··- = =,,,, -===,..,,.- - - manner In whloh they are exposed to the Re's speoria' for his mithor, ·an' he wun'ec1 whaur made available by vory ma.ny persons, the foot of Its cliffs becomes warm enough AGENTS · hlng that we d0 not h ave But oh 1 she's gan,e, she forgets her pulr wee ragglt Where there la a deficiency of natural pa.ny have been playing in her pleoa of to WA..NTED bathe In. Then t he summer loit erers same, jt ie aston1e his mlther warmth, exercise, ha.thing, and the habit of "The House in the Ma.rah" and ··In the we~n. epidemics of this kind oftener with our '.l'O SELL FOR THE no~ hovering over fires or registers Lion's · M outh" to enthusla.stio bouee i In pour In a gain and buckboards and village horses, To fully appreciate the risk the.t Is nae falther's love, an' be kens nae mlther'e will do a great deal t oward the restoration Dahlin. Her slaber Gertrude, who gave oar hs enliven the place with a kind of Oo· Incurred we need only visit the city or He keQeca.re, ls land jollity, oountry towns on court days or Se.turdays, ro soothe hie wee bit sorrowe, or kome hie taullt of the equilibrium, Next to these are the great promise when over here with Mrs. nay This n ice young man, when he was there service of foods and of olothlng. Some per· and see the number of horses of e.ll kinds hair. and conditions that stand tied a.nd almost To klee him when he waukene, or smooth bis bed at e<ine need to recognize the sugars, the fate Langtry· more than shares the honor with lHt summer, met one of the rustle baa.utie1 LARGEST L"l' CAN.ADA-OVER 400 ACRES. and the starches a.a epecia.l a.Ida to the pio· her. of the place. H~ ca.me back to hie work touching each other In every avai\a.ble sp8!ce An' oh I e'en he f~are hie althor'e lace, the drunkard'e duotion of heat, and so to make them a. A ahip haa just come round the H orn in the cit y, but the witchery of her brown about town, to 1a.y n ~·th!ng of the numbers Steady Eruployrucut to Good H en. ragglt wean. more prominent part of their nutrition. with a cargo of 225 masts from Puget eyes ca.roe with him. He wrobe, and she that are pa.eked together in the public Oh pity the wee laddie, e·e lrullelese an' eae young, Clothing needs to be used both day and Sound, each of which ls nearly 100 foet asked him to call during t he winter. So stables. The latter, a.a a. rule, a.re ~uch Paid by salary or commission, Can eta.rt that lea'e the falther's lip 'Ill aotile on his night with reference to Equal warmth. So 1afer from coming in oontaot with d1sea.se 'Ihe oath In length. These are of Douglass fir, or yesterday he 11ent a telegram telling her you at once. Dont apply unless you mean; tongue : long as the temperature ot rooms conforms and want to work. We !urniJih outbusiness than those outside, for no sensible stableman An' slnlil' worde hie mlther speaks his infant lips 'Ill fits !ree and pay expenses. Address to the established medium, and there is no "Oregon P ine" (Psudotsuga). and found he would call during the day. stain, would admit an ir.nimal inside of his stable a ready sale among EHtern shipbnllders. lt was the telegram. t hat caused the there's nane to guide the balm, the drunk· exceHive dra.ught, for tllelr own convEnlenoe STONE &IWELLINGTON, that is ir.ffeoted with any kind of contagious For ob I11rd'e . n navy has long been supplied trouble. The village was nnacoustomed ragglt wean. aud that of othera, people out of health or The Germ1 Nurserymen, disease if he knew It; hut it often happens exclusively with Pa~et Sound spars, which to telegrams. It startled the community. 'l'oronto, Ont. that neither the owner of the horse nor the rhon suroly we mlckt try an' turn that slnfu' ml\h- out of activity must aee to it to bring them· It was t oo much for the nerves of that er'11 heart, eelvas up t o the proper heat standard with· are well known in Earope. 1tableman is awa.re of the disease until it Is An' tr:v to get hie fall her to aot a falther'e part, out roasting others. :'I-. et we ha.ve ooca,lon· It is strongly indloatlve of the weak- quleb plaoa. Somehow-nobody ever will t oo late to remedy the evil. . An' mak them lea the drunkard's cup, an' never ally seen euoh people expeotlng others to ne88 of territorial lnflrienoe in Scotland know j ust how-fifteen minutes after t he aste again, Contagious dl8eases of a moat virulent Jl'ormerly s:nown as the" Soper Mills. '). wt· a parent's care, their pulr wee ragglt be over ·CJooked for their benefit. Habit, that· the Dake of Buocleugh, who owns message clicked into the office every percnara.oter may be perpetuated for an indefi. An' cherish wean. within certain ranges has so muoh to do 432 ,347 acres In North Brita.in, and son in town knew that young Blake was nite length of time by feeding horses in RIS MILL HAS BEEN THOR· ~~~- ....... ...,_·~>+ttH· . . .~~with warmth comfort t hat ea.ch Individual whose father was probably the mosb pop· coming to Bee Miss Trevette. Every stalls where the dlaea.se has existed, Of UGHLYrenovated and put inorder,under should, by t hese various adjustments, this kind we may mention glanders and and respected nobleman in that young lady of the town made up her mind ular our own spoclalsupervlsion, for the purpose ot A WONDERFlJL WALK. m11.ke great efforts to conform himself to the Spanish Itch especially, Either of theae rlscing and manu!aotur!ng Oat Mee.I and P ot country, saw his eldest brother defllated to catch a glimpse of this rash young man average requirements. Even In coming Rarley, and we are now prepared to receive most fa.ta.I dis<irders may be conveyed to last month by over 1,000 majority, when who sent telegram1, and every man deter- ordors from all our old cuBtomera and other!.' other herses by feeding In a stall where P ETER DUFOUR.$ TRAMP FROM WINNIPEG from extrema cold, it is much better to grow sta.ndlng for DumfrleS11hlre, in which mined to be there to sea that everything !or and we gurantee to Rive them who work, TO QUEBEC AND BACK, gradually warm than to seek a. too sudden horses suftering with them have been kept. lntrust us with the same entire satisfaction count y the Dake's property fo assessed went smoothly. N ow, th!s nica young revulsion, To destroy t he virus ta.ke a pint of eulphuric Oats and othet· grains taken in exchange fo'£ . Peter Dufour, the Bir.boche enfferer, Next, in building houses or choosing at $480,000 a year. man was a modes~ young man. lb was Flour Oat Meal, &;c. H . &; J. TOWNS, Bow . acid and put it in a bucket of water,and with whose walk of over 1,500 miles from Que- rooms, we are, as far as possible, to ava.il227. Thackeray's old school, the Charter with some misgiving t hat he drove over mu.nville an old mop wash all parto of the stall, es· bec to W innipeg was telegraphed upon ourselves of na.tura.l regulators of tempera· Honse, w11s some fifteen years ago r emov- the hills to ' he highlands. And when he peolally the trough and manger, as well as his arrival ab the btter place, has left for tul'e in our surroundings, Physics tee.oh us ed into the country, and ·now the whole dld get there he determined to sneak T HIS IS TOUR OPPORTUNITY the sides ot the stall. Then put a few pounds of stick aulphur in an old iron pot and, stop· home, assistance having been glven so as what are conductors and non-conductors of establishment Is advertised for sale, a n d quietly to the home of his friend. That ping t he stable a.a well as possible, burn it, to enable him to perform moat of the re- heat, wha.t kind of houses are beat adapted bhe old " cods " whom Col. N e'wcome hae wae his programme. He knew there were D o you want so as to fumlga.te the stable thoroughly, tll>k· malnder ~f his journey by rail. His story for equa.lization of temperature, 11nd what ma.de so famous, wlll live where t h ey only 500 people in the vlllage and he a. splendi d ,. Ing due precautions against fire-it ls a good is an interesting one. Forty years ago exposures are most comfortable for health. plea.ae, and receive pensions. Thia, at thought no one would know except t he h andsomely' plan t o set the pot in a tub of wat er- th.en he bade adieu to the home of his boyhood Certa.ln atones and certain walls are adapt· lea.ab, ls t h e present idea. boun d story .A uimlliar girl with the brown eyes. whitewash with lime and carbolic acid. in the provlnce of Queb ec and came wibh ed to retain moisture and to shut out air, course was adopted in the case of the b ook? Yoa:. The carriage drew up in the main street obhers to the "Great Ll:'ne L:i.nd." At and so cause both cold and dampness. In This will protect them thoroughly, can have your that time the country, of course, was com- studying temperature, we have ir.lao t o study Greenwich peneioners, but Chelsea Hos· of Highlands. The nice young man got choice out of oub In the middl e of a great crowd. There the offect of moisture, as this ca.uses varfa. pita.I continues on t he old lines. t h e bes'.; that paratively unkriown to bhe nterworld, and tion both In actual heat and in Rensatlons, The New Year's English Almanac shows were 499 vlllagers gathered to r eceive him. Timely Sue;e;estions. a.re published. the factors .o f the H udson's Bly compa.ny While it is true that the sta.ndard is the Sha was the only one tha.t r emained at if you will obThe meal for the ca.lves should be fed to were its sole lordn and masters. For 16 point of sat uration, as It Is called, this that slnoo 1863 the deposlbs of the Indus· home. The entire vllhge looked on while tain two sub-· them dry, It is a mistake to mix it in the years he hunted and trapped for the com- varies with temperature. While a. point trial claSlles in the saving banks have been he paid the driver $3 for the trip from scriptions for milk. A good mixture for the calves is pa.ny, &nd then mar ried and settled down somewhat near 30 ° lelll! ,han saturation is increased 300 per cent. In 1840, wit h a Red Bank. Then he asked t he way to T BE WEEI\LY whou.t bra.n or middling and linseed-oil meal, on a farm in the halfbreed setblement of most comfortable, there is some varit\tion popuiation of 26,000,000, ther e were 34,- her house, and marched up to the home MAIL. A catatwo parts of the bran to one of1inseed meal, Batoohe. His life past most happily within the boundaries of comfort. While 030 convictions for crlme ; In the past of the brown-eyed beauty at the head of a ,,.., ,. n · logue of stanand then add the aame bulk of oats. A cs.If until the war cry re-eohced along the val· air tends to an equilibrium, if excessively 6 v~ d ardandmiswill eat from half a gill to a quart , accord- ley of the Saskatchewan in March last. dry and unable to secure moist ure from year, with a populat ion of 3 ,000,000, proc aasion of 499 Interested indlvlduals nhere were only 14, 757 convlotlons. The determined to have fun at any er st. She cell a n e ous ing to its age and size. Feed' twice a da.y. He took no part in the troubles, bub re- other things it ma.kte too much demand Qlleen and her family since 1837, when That ls the cheapest building which gives mained loyal to his Qa.een and country. upon om'Selves, and we are made uncomfor- 11he ascended the throne, received in di- saw the procession coming up the hill and publications, given a.s prizes for getting np the greatest a.mount of room in proportion sent word that she was not at home. So, c!t1bs for TIIE MAIL, will be sent to any ta.blo. If, on the other hand, the air is too to the money cost. Judged by this rule a Along with hie f a.mily h e moved away, heavily satarated, and the weather is hot, reob Parliamentary grants no less a sum Jfke the king of Franca, he marched down 1:1.ddress upon o.pplioo.tion. '!'here is no boy £ 23,210,000, which does not emh or girl, young ma.n or young woman, among very sma.ll barn·ca.nnot well be .:iheap, There but left MB stock and farmlmplemenb be- it doeo not receive from us moisture readily than yachts, residences, the htll again. H 3 will not go to Hlg - you wh o co.nnot secure ~. handsome lot ot ls too much outside covering in proportion hind. " When the ·war' was over he l'e- enough. Then we aa.y it is not only hot, bra.oe t he cost of roval " limdu next summer. books this winter to the room inside. A large barn will also turned to his homestead, but only to find but very close. The bearing, therefore, of einecult'ea, &c. wit h very little bear greater eleva.tions wt·thout a.ppearing to hia house and bQrn in anhes and his stock moisture on heat la apparent. One of the heroes of the Franoo-Gereffort, if you will be out of proportion. To be cheap the barn lostJ fo!ever. What beo 1me of nine head - Sun light as well as sun he11ot has something mir.n war has just died, G an. Bonnema.in, The olrolllatlon of the London Times is only mako up should have a good stone basement at I.ea.st of cattle and nine homes he never could to do with comfort and with general condi· n ow confined to clubs, hotels, reataurants, ·siers in the your minds to it , , 8~ feet in height. The room thus gained asoerbain. "The land was all that waB tions of warmth. Both light and the direct who commi-.nded the C11ira.1 will usually be the chea.pest in the building, left," ho observed. All the money he rays of the sun should be eeoared through fe,m.oua cavalry ohiuge ab R 3ioh&hofen. persons who hire it t o read, a very limited The books a.re ' business meu, and families ot ex· olaas of and for winter care of stock it will be much had wan $50 and three months a.go he apartments. Having thus utiliz~d all the 'r b.e feat of arms by which he suaved the oeptionu.l a.ffi~enoe; but thousa.nds coming splen didly bound and a.re tho proad vance of the German's, while his men the most valuable. took half of this amount, (leaving the re· natur11l mopes of heating, t he next ques· under the latter head do not take it. I t Is, ductions of t h e ' Comparatively few farmers are aware how mainder with bis wife) and started for the tlon is, eh8.ll we hea.t a room or builling by fell ln scores around him under the mur- no doubt, always gla.noed over-for few much valua.ble time may be su.ved by system home he had left foroy years ago, He heating the air that is in the room or heat· derom1fire, u;o.tll Marshal Ma.cMa.hon had pereons actua.lly read through ita yards ef bost kuown authors, which is a and forethought. N ow, during these long ing fresh a.ir, and lntrodLtol.og it at a raised got clea.r. a wa;y from_W oe!'th e.nd F .roesch · print- by the majority of peers a.nd mem· sufficient guarau. ' winter evenings, excellent opportunity is had no other idea of t ravelling than on tempera weUer, le commemorated on many a can- bare of the H ouse of Commons. The effect tee tlmt they will ' t11re ? vffered to prepare as oon1plete a. working footi, and the ino\dentsof his weary jourFor heating t he air in the r.oom, the most vas and in song ; and t o t his day the apthe new enfranchisement will be to di- not only afford pfan as pnssible for every month in the year. ney are already known. .Arrived In Qae· usual forms a.re the bearth-fi're, the stove, pearanc a of a. cuirassier regim ent at e, re- of itg Influence still further, as the new amnseme nt but Write down every kind of work you expect beo he visited his brother, who 18 a far· the radiator, and aeries of pipes distributed view is ahvavs greetea with frantic ap· minish voters know nothing of it, While, how· bea source of p;ro. . JP 4.~ _ to do, every crop you intend to plant, and mer, and the latter promlaed him to send through t he room, In the two first named plaudi ts. Gen. Bonnemalns was 7 1 ever, its circula tion declines, or at best fi t. 'raE VvmmLY ~ /~ ll improvements that are contemplated. up several heads of oa.ttle and some seed thore is 1 10me smoke and dust from the oo.re stagnates, it proba.bly is as an advertising MAIL is t he most · ' Posts and rails should be made and dra.wn grain nexb spring. Having secured & of the fires, and in the ca.re of the stoves, years of age. to where they are to be used, and, of course, pair of-boots Dafour started on his return not infnquently oa.rbon oxide, unburnt car· There ls a professor In Trinity College, medium more valuable than ever, The Lon· popular weekly published, ancl is ouly One the topa of the trees used up for firewood. journey. He had very little money, the bon and hydro·oarbon deficient in hydrogen. Dublin, a Mr. Mahaffy, who le never don morning pa.per having the widest cir· Dollar a year. It has now over 100,000 subuulation ainong the well-educated class is ~cril.Jers. Specimen copy a.n d pri;;:e list sent This business of preparing fuel Is too much orother not being po~sessed of a super· These get lnt.o the air of the room either m ore In his element than when playing the Standard, free. Address T um ~:!A!L, T oronto, Canada. neglected; the adva.ntage cf havinir a full fiulty of wealbh. So there was nothing throngh cracks or crevices in the stoves or lackey to some grea.t m en, and who exsupply of it well seasoned and ready for use left for the old North weastern to do but chimneys of metal, or beca.use of imperfect hibited this trait largely on a recent visit at any time is not fully appreciat ed. · combuation. Thia lir.tter ma.y result from of Cunarvon, the Lord Lieutenant, to Absorbents, ~ spread hberally over the bo walk, and the joyo}ls anticipation of dampers, from sudden chilling of the fire, floor where horses and cattle lfo, make t ho soon meeiilng his wife and family cheered or from the want of draught. Far more the University. 'lhere ls another Proapartment look better and smell sweeter, him on . When he reached Ottawa he 6 vl!s in heating arise from imperfect com· fessor, Dr. H~ughton, cf dliforent mould, and render them more h ealthful fot tb.e oc· took the C. P . R. and followed the line bustion tha.n is generally Imagined. Be~ides, a fine, manly, and very able man. The cup1mts, Tb.ey are worth all they cost for through the wilds of Ontario. Dlloy and both the hearth.fire and the stoves draw "boy11"' got hold of him the other day, sa.nita.ry purpDseo alone, but they will pay nighb he walked, and traversed 60 miles the air so toward themselves ae to make and insisted on his making a speech. a large profit again in the fertlllzing mater· on more t.ha.n cne day. About 50 miles draughts which make thorn sitting near win- Commenting on the Viceroy's visit, Dr. lal t hat will a.come from their use. Remember this and purchase your Furs at east o! Winnip eg he w2s told bya. man at dowe or doors liable to take cold from the Haughton ea.Id : '"I n ever my11elf could the station to gab on a train which was ln·rushing air. Io this form of heating, too, see why Providence made Ptlnoea and d h d'd H8 f a pa.rt of the room is much more heated Emperors, and thdse kind or people, bub · 1eavmg an e 1 80 · was so a · th&n the parts away from the fires. Ox Yokes. having made them lean quite u nderstand tlgued that he fell asleep, and the trainBut with these objections there a.re very There are three pll.rts of an ox which are men were unable to w11oke him until great advantaizes. 1'here aro few of the why it made creatures like P1·of. Mahaf· more lill>ole to be made sore by ordinary after Winnipeg was reached a.t twelve common ventilators at all equal to fire· fy to dance atbendance on them." work in the yoke than any other- viz., the top of the neck and the shoulders, We often o'olcok on Thursday night. Here he was plllocea a.nd stoves for charging and purify· · The wa1te of food in hotels and restan· see oxen with sores .on the3e parts, S_?re well looked afber. Dufour is a man sixty ing the atmosphere. Where air la thus rants, says the Chicago Times, ls 'some- A full and complete stock of all kinds of Fur Coats, Caps ahoulders are often ca.used by the bow being yea.re of age, and his grey beard and locks drawn out, fresh air is likelv t.o get in in its thing enormous. In L ondon thla waste J ackets, Ladies' and ~Iisses' Sets, &c. too wide. Sometimes it Is caused by the and wrinkled fell.turea denoteB that he place. If, during a cold winter day, 300 is partially utilized by the Siaters of M erbow being too square, or too sha.rp on the has lived every day of lb. He Is tall s.nd pounds of coal a.re burnt In the stoves of a cy, who k eep some one constanbly in t he outer ed8e, The bow should be perfectly wiry and poaseasea an iron consbltutlon. room, there wlli be, according to Reguault, k itchen to save all the scraps as well as ~am.b_ 93,600 cubit feet ofair, weighing over 7,000 the a.rb!cles tha~ are returned from the round at the shoulder joint; the drop of the poundo, passing through t ne stove Into the dining rooms. T .b.ese are carefully sorstaple, as a. general thing, should come down a chimney. A room 20x30K12, couhinlng 7,· " How Long?" about haJf way from t he top of the neck to 200 cubic feet of air, would then be emptied t ed and put i n covered baakete, The the shoulder j olut ; the leader especia.lly BRING YOUR WORK IN EARLY. sonps, chowdel', and gravies a.r e placed in The Engli&h tongue is at the best sadly needs a "'.(ire crooked yoke or a longer confusing and contradictory to foreigners. and refilled 13 times, or about every 40 min· c·u1a or buckets. .Ab night a covered ataple tha.11 when dra.wlng on the rib. Many If the foreigner be a. German, the probabili· utes, which is more than is needed t o secure wa!l'gon comes a nd takes them away. All the leading lines and special bargains in F elt Hats and Caps. of our farmers seem to oare but little about ties are t hat It will take him a. long time to sufficient change. The thoroughly well-re· the yokes their cattle work in, 'fhey put emerge from hia linguistic fogs. During a gula.tfld stove, a.swell as the hearth-tire, on Some of the artbles are taken tohospitals them in too long or too short a yoke In the certain tri11l it wae thCJught Important by the average secures the moot breathable air, and a.sylumq, the others are distributed Gents' Furnishings, of which there is always the latest styles winter time, and they crowd so it is hard counsel to deter mine the length of time tha.t although, no doubt, some methods of indi· among those of the sick and p oor who and best quality at lowest prices, such as Rubber Coats1 getting a.long the road ; and then the yokes two quarters of beef, two hogs and one sheep rect heating, hereafter to be nodced, excel are deserving, are made by a. person who does not under- remained in a.n express we,gon in front of it. The amount of heilt secured, in propor· ' . Umbrellas, Underwear, Hose, Braces, Gloves, &c. ~1ta.nd his business and the yoke rolls baok plaintiff's store before they were ta.ken 11.wa.y tion to the fuel consumed, ls not al ways satlr;factory ; but, where . this method of op. the neok. Some are too straight and bytbe defendant. GIVE HIM A CALL .AND PROCURE A BARGAI N. heating is adopted, there is very seldom others too crooked so the oxen can't travel. The witness under examination was a The fact is farmers are not particular enough German, whose knowledge of English was need of artificial arrangements for ventlla· tion. about the yokes and bows their oxen work rather limited · . i:n. Counsel- State to the jury how long it wa.s The ()lock's Stopped. N after you took the mea; from the store and put it in the wagon until it was taken Slight though the ticking of a clock may Cremation in England. a.way. L11ost week the third human body wir.s creWitness-Now I shooet can't told dat. I be, oir.ya a writer, lbs sudden cessation has mated at Woking. By the deslre of the re- dlnks 'bout twelve feet, I not say nearer a wonderfnl Influence upon those lu the room ln which the time keeper ls located. latives, the body wae burnt in its elm coffin, a.e dat. The process was very 11a.tisfactorily complet· Counsel-You don't understand me. How A dim r ealization of something wrong - -- o--ed in an hour and a ha.If, although the body long was it from t he time the meat left the steals over the senses- a feeling as if I beg to announce that my supply of Granite and Marble Monuments wall never so - that of a lady- weighed fourteen .stone. store and was put Into the wagon before it something of value had l;>een lost, or a friend away perhaps never to return, or large as at present . '.I.'he residual a.shes were quite white. The was taken awir.y by the defendant? cremation Society requires the fullest lnfor. Witness-Now I don'd see what you ax as If some of the children were slok, until In Variety of Pattern it is most modern. mation as to the cause of death from two da.t for. Der vagon he va.s back up mit der sudden ly some one look11 up and exclaims In Finish, far exceeding any you can see elsewhere. registered medical practitioners. It reserves sidewalk, and dat le ehoost so long as It "Why, the clock's stopped !" And imthe right of refueing the use of Its furnace vas. '1 ou tell me ev you pleeze how long mediately the Ill-defined forebod!nga disln Workmanship, first-clu.ss. in any 01He where it thinks fit. Sir.nitary der ddewir.lk vas. Den feet? D welve feet 1 sipate, the little ohadow of gloom melts And price as low as at any experienced shop reformers genera.Hy will join in cong rat Dan I tells you how long. away, and as the winding up process is I have received by S. S. "Indiana," a consignment of c la.tlng the society on the steady progreBB Counsel- I don't want to find out how ! 'cremation in public opinion. In l!'rauce a Jong the sidewalk was, but I wish to know complet ed and the cheery bloklng recom: ery importa.nt advance ha.a been made, as (speaking very slowly) how-long-this- menced, the family olrole regains ibewontSCC>TC~ the Profeatnre of the Seine ha.a decided mea.t- waa-in- the - wagon-before- it- ed buoyancy or spirits, and the members Another lot has arrived by S. S. " N ebrask a," and others are following. wonder what It was that caused a spell to spend £8,000 iu the erection of a crema· wae- taken-a.way. so gloomy a few m om ents b efose. 1. BUY DIRECT Fil01'1 'J.'DE lllA.:NlJFA.C'I'lJREH.S torium in the great Parieia.n cemetery, Pere Witness- Oh py cracious, I don'd sold my L a.chaise. We trust the Commissioners of meat dat va.y I I don'd me1111ured meat,!not in Aberdeen, Scotland , an d from l ong experience (28 yea.rs) at the best advantage,' I Sewers for the city of London will not be yet I I velgh it already. But I dinks tlat When an impecunious man marries an Has received her new stock of intend that the public rleeding work in my line ehall be liberally dealt with. for behind the Paris authorities, but will mea.t vaa 'bout dree foot long. heiress he celebrates his golden wedding ou I engage no Agents. I keep for sale again consld r the proposal cf carrying out the start · Goun.~el (desparately)- Look hare, I want the practice in their cemetery a.t Ilford, As to know how long it was before the meat A newspaper ma.n never hunts for a situa· and invites the Ladies of Bow· Sir , Spence · Wells :puts it in one of his wa~ taken away after it was put in the tion. He alwa.ys "accepts the poeitim." apeeohes : "The choice is between cremation wa.v.on. is never " bounced." He merely " sev· manville and vicinity t o call or corruption, purification or pu~refaction . 11 Witne.ss (looking knowingly at ceunsel.- He ers his connection. for enclosing Lots, at Lowest P rices. and see her Pattern Now·you try and ged me iD a scrape. Da.t The London Truth says : "The Queen did mead was shoost so long In der vagon 11>s it ALL WORK GUARANTEED. The Spaniards have a proverb ; " When vas in der shop. D it's all I tol d you. .Da.t a. kindly aot last week, when, aa she was mother-in-laws fall out we get at the family mead was dead mead, He don'd grow 110 driving th.rough Windsor, ehe observed a. and assortment ot · ca.b-horse fall dea.d, An outrider wa.~ sent onger In ten dousan' ye!l.r-not mooch I faots. 11 to make enquiries, and, on learning the Gou.nsel -Tha.t will do, N . B. - I have no connection or interest in the Composition, Pottery, or Zina Sam Jones says : "Live eo your children n11oturc of the accident, Her Majestv ca.used may put their feet in your tracks and be Monuments, so called; I have enquired concerning their merits and cannot recom· a.n intimation to be conveyed to the lamenthonorable. " That la, don't walk all over "Ever kneeling a.t thy feet"-The bcot· ing owner that he should be presented with STORE:- SccondDoorWest of Wllllams mend them to the public at any price. the road on the way home nights, bl11ock, Bowmanville, June 18, 1885. 25-3m, u.nother hone from the royal utables," Butcher Stn11 · THE FARM. ·y.._ FONTHILL NURSERIES. Caledonian Mills. T SELF PRESERVATIONI The first L aw of Nature. HAT AND FUR STORE. Wl:AYERS ··o· -. · ··· Russian Coats made on the premises. Ordered Work1 and Repairing specialtyo . M. MAYER, , eads' Block. Furrier Granite and Marble Works, BOWMANVILLE. G-:El.A..N"9:I:TE:; ,\11SS McTAVISH GOODS, ............... Marble Mantles, Grates, &c., and fix them, Head Stones, Posts, and Metallic Bars BONNETS, HATS TRIMMINGS C. BOUNSALL, Proprietor.

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