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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 14 Aug 1885, p. 2

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THE CANADIAN STATESMAN IB PUBLISHED AYER'S FOR THE FARMER. Dairy and Stock Topics. Salt for stock is not a. necessity, Here may be a e11oving.-Ool. F . . Ourtis, A N ew Y ork oa1.ryman Ba.ye he is convinced that every bushel of windfall apples fed to hie cows was worth a. pound of cheese, Cows should not be heated up by being hurried, excited by bad usage, eto., and should have a shade from the extreme he.,.t of the sun, A beef animal is like an apple-first the green stage ; second the ripe stage, and third the over·ripe stage-when it begins to de· teriora.te, Good pigs never come from poor ca.re and poor feed, Good care does not, however, necessa.rly imply go1ging a growing shote with rich food until it is a ma.es of diseased fat. Give to the cows none but the best and purest food. With no other stock is this so essential, for the reason that It has been fully demon11tra.ted by competent authority that milk is a very prolific source:of transmitting disease germs from impure food, and especial· ly from impure waters· In selecting a. dairy oow see that she has a good ba.g. This is where she carries her milk, and if small, she can not carry much. Never buy a cow with teats an inch long; let some one else have her, a.nd get one with teats that the hand can grasp. This is a very important point in the make-up of a dairy cow· To make a. gentle milker, a ca.If should be trained from the time it is two months old. It should be rubbed and stroklJd and petted. Its teats and udder should be handled fre· q uently from the beginning, Thus, when the animal ie ready to become a cow, it will be familia.r with the motions of milking. A correspondent of the London Live Stocli Journal ha.e been looking up ancient milk records, a.ndfinde among the laws of a. Welsh king, Rowel Dd ,., made as early as the tenth century, thr.t prioes were fixed for the cur· rent value of certain r.nima.ls. For any defect or blemish of any anima.l at the time of sale, reparation a.nd restitution must be ma.de by the seller. No wooden uteMil should be used in milking or in setting milk. Wood absorbs the milk into its pores, and when the pail is eoa.lded, this milk becomes coagulated, fer. ments and decomposes, and will surely in· jure the milk, by infecting it with leaven of putridity. Tin pails a.nd pa.ns should first be washed with cold water, then with hot water and soap to remove the grease, then rinsed, and finally scalded with boiling hot water, wiped with clean dry towels, and afterwards placed ont of doors to air in BUD· shine. The straw from beans is a natural food for sheep, a.nd t hey a.re the only stock which are fond of it. It is a healthy:food for them, Oa.t st.raw is better for sheep than any unpa.lata.ble ha.y. They will pick out a.11 of the leaves and hea.ds of all kinds of straw, but they do not like the coarse straws, and will not eat them unless forced to by hunger, Straw, to be gooi for sheep, should not be over-ripe, musty, or full of orgot. On this ao~ount rye Is the poorest, a.nd wheat next. To give eheep a. keen appetite, no more should be glven them than they will ea.t up olea.n. They come to a sweet smelling and fresh rack of food with a relish. A'flock of sheep, er.ya the Rural Canadian, "ehould double themselves each year, r.nd early la.mbs will sell for quite 8o8 much as the sheep cost in the first place, thus lea.ving the p11orent stock and wool to the good, In fact, sheep breeding ls one of the best pay· ing branches of mix'ld farming, espll_!lially in this country, with _ i ts dry climate and rich pastures. There is no country in the world where sheep thrive so well, are so free from disease, and atta.in such perfection, as in Canada, Those formers who a.re neglecting this import11nt industry ~re standing in their own light, and t hose who have k ept their flock s by careful breeding have never done so well as during the past few year s." Shying or dodging horses a.re made so generally by impaired eyesight which gives them an imperfect view of objects, and they do not recognize ordinary things and a.re frightened by them ; whereas, if they could see well they would not shy. Poor eyesight ma.y be ca.used by over-heating, over-drawing a.nd by wolf-teeth. · For the first there should be cooling diet, such a.a grass, carrots, and bran mashes, together with laxative medicine, glauber salts being the best, fed d!lily with the m ashes, one-fourthpound, un. tll the a.nim11.l gives evidence, by the brightuanoe tha.t ness of its coat and genera.I appe1 its blood has become purified and the fever is out of it. When this condition is reached the eyesight will be improved a.nd .perhaps r est ored. Over-loading horses is both stupid and wicked, and st rains the nerves of the eyes, for which the only remedy is to wash the eyes two or t hree times daily with a mild extract of witch hazel, or some good eye-water. When this straining is severe nothing will cure it, a.nd the horse ueually becomes blind, wit h which a. person will attend t o t he busi11ees, Caledonian Mills. Formerly irnown as the " Soper Mille. ') MIL L H AS BEE N THORT HIS UGHLY renovated and put in order under our own special supervision, for t he purpose of r lsting and manufacturing Oat Meal and Pot l'larley, and we are now pr epared to recAive order s from a ll our old ou·tomers and others tor work, an<l; we gura ntee t o give t hem who lntrust us with the s ame e ntir e satisfaction Oat s and other grains taken in exchange ro~ !1:~~1?i!t Meal, &c. lI. & J, 'l'OWNS, ~~~ EVERY FRIDAY MORNING, -DY- M . A.JAMES,. A'l' l'HE OFEICE ~oatomcelnock,K.lngSt.,Bowmanvllle,Ont Hai.rVigor restores, wit11 the gloss and freshness of youth, faded or gray hair to a natural, rich brown color, or deep black, as maybe desired. By Its use llght or red hair may be darkened, t hin hair t hickened, and baldness often, t hough not always, cured. It checks falling of the hair, and stimnfates a weak · and sickly growth t o vigor. It prevents and cures scurf and dandruff, and heals neal'ly every disease peculiar t o the scalp. A s a La<lies' Hair Dressing, the VrooR is uneriualled; it contains neither oil nor dye, renders the hair soft, glossy, and silken in appearance, and imparts a delicate, agreeable, and la.sting perfume, -) MR. c. P. DRIClIER writes from Kirby, o. luly 3, 1882 : " L1 1·t fall my hair commenced falliug out, and in a short time I became nearJy bald. I used pa.rt of a bottle of A VE Jt'S HAm VIGOlt, which st.upped the fa]]. Ing of the hair, and started a new growth. I have now a full head of hair growing vigorously, and am convinced that but for the use of your preparation I should have been entirely bald." J. w. BoWEN, proprietor of the Jl.fcArtlmr (0/lio) Enquirer, says : " AYER'S HAIR VIGOR is a most excellent preparation for the hitir. I speak of it from my own experience. Its use promotes the growth of new hair, and makes it glossy and soft. 'l'he VIGOR is also i i sure cure for dandrull'. Not within 111y !mowledge has the preparation ever tailed to give entire satisfaction." MR. A NGUS FAIRBAIRS, leader of the celebrated "Fairbairn Family " of Scottish the old hen cooped, but let the coop 1IleKeep so located that t he chicks can have a lon g 1 'Un on g rass or in a garden. They will kill myriads of small insects, to their own and r.he far mer's good, and do no hium, Y oung 11hickens should be petted a little, by feedmg them from thfi ha.nd and otherwise, so they will remain t ame, Thie w ill ease the work a nd add t o the pleasure of oaring for them very much. Want of cleanliness is one of t hemOflt com -- COALITION J?· Machine Foundry .AN .D- TER::NI:S: $ 1.50 p eran num,or $1.00if pa.i<lln advance P&yment strictly in advance required from u bsor1ber a outside of t be county. Ordf;lrS to ·1oontinue t he paper muBt be accompa.med by he a.mount due, or the paper will not be stopped. IUbscribers are r esponsible until tu! !payment is made, JU.TES OF A.DVERTISING1 1S~~ CARRIAGE WORKS To the Ladies n s, - '1 Whole Column one year ...... ..... .. $50 00 &J ::ii!!= Halt year ............ 30 oo· 1:;::;: One quarter ........ , 20 00 ~.,, Half Column one year ............. .. 30 00 - · " IIalf year ............ . . 20 00 '" " One quarter .. ......... 12 50 QJuarter Column one yell.r . .......... 20 oo " " Half year . .. .. · · .. .. lll 60 " One quarter.. .... .. 8 00 5 l!lx lines and under, first insertion .· $0 60 Eaoh subsequent insertion...... .U 25 B'l:'om six to ten lines, first insertior., 0 75 ... Ea.ch subsequent insertion...... 0 35 - 10 !;Iver ten lines.first insertion,per line 0 10 Ea.ch subsequent insertion, " 0 03 _ 'The number of lines to be reckoned by :Qe space occuv.!ed,.measured by a scale of ,illOlid Nonpareil. ·~~=~===== =- . Dll. TAltlBI.'t'N, 'i 'i[) HYSICIAN, SURGEON and AcO O UCiiEUR. L. Ofllce :-Silver Street. Bowmanville. 7 Dr. :A.. BJ;I'I'll, RADUATE OI<'THJ<J '£0RONTO UNIVER U SI'i'Y, Physician, Surgeon, &o. OtHoe King 'f:Jtreet, MORitIS' BLOCK, Bowmanville. {'I --~---------------- .J. w. JleLaughUn, Ill, B., ..LICENTIATE OF THE ROYAL COLLEGE or P hysicians and member of the Royal College of Surgeons, E dinburgh. Office; :MORitlS' DLOCK King-st.,Bowman- ~!~ le ~·:__----------·----- M DR. J. (l. !lllTt!HJlLL, EMBER OF COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS and Surgeons, Ontar io, Coroner, etc, ·Office and Residence. Enniskillen. U. .John Keith Galbraith, ARR IS '.l' ER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC, &c. OfHce- Bounsall's J:lloc,k ID ng Str oot, Bowman ville. Money to lend, B D, BURKE SIMPSON, ARl:tISTElt, SOLICITOR &o., MOPTUS BLOCK, up stairs, King Street, Bowman 'C'i lle. Solicitor for the Ontario Bank. Frlvate llloneys loaned at the lowest rates, R very evhlenco of the change which tleetlng t ilue_,procureth, I J1ave used A Y J>R' s HAIR V!Golt, and so have lJeen able to maintain an appearance of youthfulness-a matter of considerable consequence to Jninist ers, ora... t ors, riotors, and in fact every one who lives in the eyes of the public." Mns. o. A. PRESCOTT, writing from 18 Elm St., C/larlestown, ilfass., April 14, 1882, says : "Two years ago a.bout two-thirds of my hair came oil'. It thinned very rapidly, and I was fast growing bald. On using AYlm 's H Am Vwrm the falling stopped an<l a new growth commenced, and in about a month my head was completely covered with short hair. It has continued to growt and ie now as good as before ltfcll. I regularly used but one bottle of the vroon, but now use it occasionally aa a dressing." We have hnndreds of similar testimonials to the efficacy of AYEn's HAIR Vrnon. lt needs but a. trial to convince the most skeptl· cal of its value. PREPARED DY Vocalists, writes f ron1 lJosion, llfass., Feb. 6, 1880 : "Ever since my hair began to give sil- Dr·.!. O.Ayer&Co.,Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Drugglatll. JlOBEllT AllMOlJJl, H:GI8TR.A.R, WEST DURHAM ISSUER R of Marriage L!cenees, Barrister and Attor· 117 &t Law and -Solicitor In Chancery. Money hned on Real Estate. Office on King street, Sowmanvllle, 11. T. PHILLIPS Cheap Life Insurance. Insure in the Confederation Life Aaao· ciation. It is cheaper than the Ca.nadian Mutnal Aid, A, 0. U. W. or any pa~11 aronnd your hat institution, a11 the following examples will prove ; Thoe, McClung has been insured einoe 1872 for$ 2,000and the last five years it only cost him $2.55 per annum on ea.ch $1,000 to insure. John MoClung insured a.t the same time for the same amount and it only cost him $1. 74 per annum on ea.ch $1,000 to insure, he being a little younger. We certify the above to be correct. Thoe. McClung, John MoChmg. THOS. BINGHAM, Agent . mon causes of failure in pottltry keeping. - - -3 0 PRIN CE SS MOWERS. Good a.a The housee:should be leaned daily, or semi· I beg t o a nnounce that I have a very fine the best and Cheap as t h e Cheapest. weekly at the longest Sweep, whitewash choice of and use c~rbolio acid often enongh to k eep ANG 50 B U GGIES, Bambridge Pat ent Gears, floor clean, and the roosts and nests ree S WIT CI-IE S u nsurpassed by any mad e . from lice. Nest eggs made ofcalclined plas· j a.:nd WAVES. ' 200 CHAMPION P LOUGHS, wa r rant· ter, wet up with wate in which are a few drops of oa.rbolio aoid, are excellent for keep- I do all my own HAIRt itWOBK an·l wtll ed t o clean , · ffi R ing lice away from the nesta. H . Bl WIU'l'llll h cu e r s, ollers, Har r ows, and e very aJ.r eac t h d · Ie ment used b y either · p' · o er go o unp · Keep the chickene growing now, a.n:d feed H aJ.r J.:ns G -' t 'T E d . N t &, C r1 o r ory. very goo p om t Con· as if they were laying fowl. Now is the time served and bad R efor m ed in the above to force them along if it is desired to ha.ve them lay early. A little extra feed and care STAMP ING done promptly a nd n eaLly . list. during the first three months will do more Engin e Work a Specially . good to make them good winter layers than Over lit. Mayer's Store, · · Bowmanville, I Bo~~~,Ma.y 21st, 1885. 21 any patent poultry food can do after Thanksgiving. If breeding thoroughbred fowl, they should be separated from other;breede at th ree months old, and better at six w eeks if Leghorns or game are with them. Early maturity is an important factor in a. Those who st ay at home, oil up with pullet, and hence it is now t oo late to secure them early. The best course to pursue is to make up the time by crossing with cooks from the early maturing breeds. Th e best and keep t hings running till t he absent ones return. cock for this purpose is a Leghorn, Pullets l,M.A.CHIN E OILS. from a L eghorn cock and ordinary common WOOL OI LS. hens will lay when six months old, and conHARNESS OILS. sequently if the pullets are hat ched in June they will lay in December if the winter does AXLE GREASE . not come in too soon. Geese should not be plucked until the goalinga are all hatched and able to t.a.ke care of themselves. The geese may be plucked twice- once in J nly and once in N ovember, as they will have nothing to do after this month in the way of lay ing or eitting It should be remembered that the renewal of the fea.thers is a great drain on the system, I b eg t o announce that m y s u pply of G ran ite a n d M a rble M onumen ts wae never so large as a t present . and the geese should be well fed, and given In Variety of Pattern it is most modern. a. warm, dry place at night until they are Jn F inish, far exceeding any you can see elsewhere. fully fea.thered .again, s es on:i.bs. , MRS. A. DAVIS, RANK AND Fl LE to the Front and Defend your Countr y. McCOLL'S LARD I NE ' McColl Bros. & Co., Toron~o. Granite and Marble Works, B OWMANVILLE. ---o --- L Ir ICENSED AUCTIONEER for the County of Durh8m, Sales promptly attended. Addr68a- H1un11tou P, 0 . 59, 0 R. UIJT(lUISON. llCENSED AUC'l'IONEER, CONVEYAN LJ CER end Commissioner in B. H. Sales at ended to prom-ctly and at reasonable rates. \\lSi,Address-Euniskillen P. O. Money to Lend on reasonable terms, Address .([)artwrigh' , Out. 472 every man who buva his Lioen~e from O ENRY SYLVESTER. Enniakillen. W, .W. Dlt:KE't', OHN BUG BES. -Licensed Auct'oneer, Valuator and Arbitra tor. Fire nnd Life J · n!!llrance, · Notes and Accounts Collected, . .A_ GOOD WIFE GUARANTEED TO E'l'F:RINARY' SURGEON, graduat.e of the Ontario Veterinary College. 01Hce and R eaidence, N~wTONVILLE, Ont. Will visit Orono every Tuesday. Otlloe hours (rom 12 a. m. to 4 p, m.. at Coulter'B Hotel. Special a ttention paid to Surgery.. 32-ly* V Has received her new stock of GOODS"' and invites the Ladies of Bow· manville and vicinity to call and see her Pattern at t he rttte of 4 a nd 5 pe1· cen t, No notice of w ithdrawn! required . Also loans money on m o1·t.gages at lowest rates. No commission c harged. W. F . .ALLEN, Bowmanville. 8-ly, l"ROF. W. WILLSON, OXEY ! MONEY !- The subscriber receives money on deposit tor theOntario M :Loan and Savings Company, and pa.ya in_ t\}rest ln Workmanship, :first-CI11ss. Egge ma.y be pa.ckedin salt for winter use. And price as low as at any experienced shop · Coal ashes, plaster, well-dried oata or com, a.nd even du&t may be used, but ea.It is the I . have received by S . S. " I ndiana," a consignme n t of best. Dry proceesea a.re more convenient than liquid methods, and t he later they a.re A nother lot has 3rrive d by S. S. "Neb raska, " a n d others a r e following. preserved the better. The chief p oint t o be observed, however, is to frequently tur n I D1J¥ DIRECT FROlU 'l'HE JUA.:NlJFA.C'l.'lJRE RS the eggs, and keep the boxea in a. cool place. in Aberde en, Scot land, 11.nd from lon g ex peritinoe (28 years) at th e best a.d va.nta<>'e I intend t h at the pu blic needing work in my line shall be liberally <lea.I t with~ ' Under domestication fowls r£q uire triI . engage no Agent s. I keep for sa le tioue food, with a. IitL le seasoning once in a while, to give relish. Any simple condiment like glnger, or pepper, is stimula.ting and helps to make them thrifty, but t hey should for enclosing Lots, at Lowest Prices. not be fed on sucll q,;,a.ntity as would cause undue action in t he system, but merely to A L L W 0 R K G U A R A N T E E O. "tone up." 1f fowls are fed in this way there is no reason to expect they will keAp in good condition and make t hemselves valN. B.- I ba ve n o connection or inte rest i n t h e Co mposi tion, Pottery or Z in c uable to their keepers, Monumen t s, so called ; I h ave en qnired concer n ing th eir merit~ and oanuo~ r ecom· mend t hem t o th e public at any price. Buwmanville, J une 18 , 1885. 25-3m. SCOTC:B: 0..::Fl..A.l.'1':CT:E · Marble Mantles, Grates, &c., and fix them, Head Stones, Posts, and Metallic Bars C. BOUNSALL, Proprietor. -"\. SOIENOE. BONNETS, HATS and assortment ot TRIMMINGS 'VilllllDlll trTIE ACHER OF PIANO , ORGAN AND :L SINGING. '.l'erma : For beginners $6 ; for STOKE :-Second Door Wes& of advanced pupils. $10 for quar~er of twelve Butcher StnH "-Eissons. Residence at. :Mr. Joseph Brittain's, e orner Liberty and Concession Street, Bow lillaDVille. 51-tf, Pianos 'l'uned an<l Repaired. '.l.'uned or repafred can have t hem a ttended 0 by leaving word at the DOMINION ORGAN Co's Ot'ij·rcm, J3owrrrnnville , A Jlrst·clas man ~1ow Mns. HUMPHREY HAS REMOVJ!:D 'RER to buil<lings fonnecly occupied by CODD & CO., P ARTIES WISHING o·eing in t h e ir mv lo ', THEIR PIANCJS HARNESS SHOP !So l.ti ol i@ n , u 0t so :fast . lf~ cn.Ue rn c n of' F a.sh · . t\ve w rit t en these fe w lines . And all I have t o say_ 1Jrlla t you ca n fin d me still at h ome, l a m not gone a way, 8 0 all my kind old t rlend s ma y come, And all t hey oung ones , t oo, cll.nd get their garments nicely·made In fashion s that a re new: ilfhere old ancl young, dear friends, n1ay meet A wefoome l!'.reetin11:. bv R . PEA'rE firstDo or fast of RueoottomHouse. She has now in stock everything usually found in a well equipped HARNESS SHOP. One of tile properties conducive to d ura.bility In timber is its odoriferoueness, which repel insect foes as a. rule. The procelfS of curling fea.thers consists in heating t bem slightly b efore the fire, then strok ing them wit h the ha.ck of a knife, when they will curl. The increase in st rength due t o seasoning of differ ent woods is given as follows-White pine, 9 per cent; elm, 12 '3 r er cent .; oak, 26'1i per cent. ; ash, 4 4 '7 per cent ; beech 61 '9 per cent. Dr. Sydney Thompson suggests the fol owing formula in erysipelas-Fluid ext r11ct of jaboro.ndi , twenty-four part s ; laudanum a.nd glycerine, each four parts. T llis mix t ure is to be painted over the affect ed surfaces every four hours. A good substitute for ground glass is ma.de as follows: W ork toget her equal parts of white lead and common put ty un· t il quit e soft, t hen for m it into a ba.11, a.nd roll it over t he surface of the glass, a.nd a ground-glass appearance is t he result. Shoe-dressing : Gum-shellac half a pound, alcohol thi:ee quarts ; dissolve, and add ca.m· phor one a.n d a half ounce, lampblack two ounces. The foregoing will be found to give an excellent gloss, and is especially adapt ed to any leather the rnrfaoe of which is rough. ened by wea r. Persona who use brass letters on glaee windows or doors are of ten t roubled by their dropping off, from unequal ex pension, or from too violent efforts on t he p art of the window-cleaner. Tile following is ~a.id t o be a sure cement-it sh ould b e mixed just befor e using -Litharge, t wo p arts ; white lead, one pa.rt ; boiled linseed oil, three parts ; gum copal, one part. The ·following mouth-washes a.re r ecom · mended for sick per sons, whose teeth and gums often b ecome unhealthy through in· sufficient nourishment, medicines, or want of cleansing- One pa.rt per manganate of p otash to from one h undred to one hundr ed and fifty parts of water, to which can be a dded some camrhor, as the metallic t as te is disagreeable ; or a solution of ba.raoio acid one in twenty or thirty; or the following- tine· ture of benzoin, t en pa.rts ; tannic acid, twenty parts ; alcohol, t hirt y parts ; oil of pepper · mint, a sufficiency. P ut t en or t wenty drops into a glass of water, Bl'Jots anti Sl1o~s. Keep your feet dry and warm, You can do so· by callincr at t lrn where t here will be found a complete assortment of every kind of footwear from t he smallest to the largest. \ If we cannot fit you with a ready-made pair, we can make you any kind t hat may be needed, in t he latest style. 'Parlor Sho8 Store,' Good fits warranted every time or no sale. 0 E JM: EN"" T I .N'" Gneatly done so that the patch can scarcely be discovered. ·- .-· .D ENTISTRY Call a.t the new premises. MRS. HUMPHREY Trunks a:qd Satchels will be kept in stock; also the IDJ fll lf . W ITH TEE'£B, m !il ffiID Best quality of Dressing and Blacking No t rouble to sl1ow goods. Please give us a call. . Fj WITR01J'.l' TEETH. The Jeweller's, STAND:-Neads' Block. -W. JENNINGS. Is the best place in town to buy Watches, Clock a and J ewellery of all the no west designs . B efor e purchasing give me a ".>VE R TWENTY YEARS EXPERIENCE, call and you will save m oney- we will not liiUrcmsOxtdeGas Aclnlinlsteretl for Patnles be undersold by a.ny small firm . We Ope.l'ations. car ry a large stock of s uch goods as are - ··FEima MU(lLlJNG'S BLO()Jt. usually k ept in a first-class j ewellery store. PltAfJ')'ICAL DEXTI.'OT, J.M. BRIMACOMBE, HEALTH FOR ALL ! rrmrmm'llUl!ll!1JHii~lj}il THE PILLS Purify the Blood, correct all Disorders of the In Spectacles · In Silverware In Repairing c. HARNDEN, L. D. S., Graduate ofthe Royal College or Dental Surgeons, Ontario. OFFICE OVER DICKSON'S STORE. W LD FILLING A SPECIALTY. .ii,te Work executed in the latest and moat improved style~! the Dental .A.rt, - SETH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAIN1 t he use of Nitrous Oxide Gas, without injury to the pil ient. l!'arttoular attention pa.id ·o the regulation ot CHILD R EN' S TEETH, ,,.....ALL WORK W .AR.RA.NTED.~ Poultry Points. and E ye G lasses we k eep the best in town, and ours is the only place in town where Sell a.U:producte of the poultry yard as soon an Optometer is kept for fitting the sight a.a they are ready for market, properly, You cannot be too careful :F'eed the poultry just before it goes to about your eye eight. roost, and again:: just as soon as it is light enough to see, or leave the food where they can get it thems!llves in the morning. our stock ia all new and of t he latest N ever wait for a rise in the price of young designs, e.nd will be sold at low prices t o chicks. It never oome11. As soon as aspa.r· suit the times ·. agus appears in the market, is the time when they may be sold to good advantage. When once the prices begin to decline, they W atch es, Clocks and J ewellery and all go down until t he "old hen " standard is fine work we give the v ery be& t aat.isfaotion. W e do all our own work a nd defy reached. Lov~ for the business a nd faithful attencompetition. Old Gold and Silver taken in exchange. tion· to it puts the poultry r aiser a long way on the road to success. The difference beMAYNARD, The J eweller tween a. basket of eggs and no eggs at all M orris' Block, Bowman ville lies in that, and in the result of the fidelity LIVE R, S'l'OlTIA.Un, .KID1'EYS AND DOWELS. They invigorat e and 1'0store to health Debilitated Constitutions, and are inval uable i n all Complalnt s incidental to F e males of all Agee. Ch ild ren and the aged t hey a r e prioele11s. For Is an ini'allible remedy for B~d Legs, Bad Breasts, Old Wounds, Sores and U lcers. THE OINTMENT It is famous for Gout and R heumatism, -Chest it h as no eq u al. - For disorderl! of the For Sore Th1·oats , Bronchitis, Coughs, ()olds, Gl"l.ndular Swellings, and all Skin Diseases it has no rival; and'[for cont racted and s t iff joint s it acts like a charm. T hose really anxious to grow plants will Man ufactur ed only a t T HOMAS H OLLOWAY'S Est a blishment, always find out ways and means to g ratify their h ates, even under apparently insur78, NEW OXFORD STREET, (late 533, OXFORD STREET), LONDON mountable difficult ies. A properly arrang- And are sold at ls. l ! d ., 2s. 9d., 4s. 6d., lls., 22s., and 33s. each Box a r Pot, and ed window-box, judiciou sly plant ed and may be had from all Medicin e V endors t hroughout t:Qe W orld . ca.red for, may sometimes give more plea.d'Purcbasers sh o·ld look at the I.abel on the Pots and :Boxes, Ir the addr e·· sure to its owner than a large ga.rdrn. ts llot 1133, Oxford Street , Lon.don, they are spur ious ,

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