Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 8 Jan 1892, p. 7

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1 ii i s 8 There have appeared from time to timein this pep“ during the past year m‘gfi i on board the ship while bound for Charles- remarhble cures In various part minion. In each case the circumstances con. nected therewith had been investigated by well known he accounts given. Perhaps the case that at- tracted most attention was that of Mr. John Marshall, of Hamilton. This was not, per- haps, because his use was an more remark- ab e than some others, but use it was attended by some other uliar circum- stances that served to emp ize it in the minds of the public, as for instance the fact that he had been pronounced absolutely in- curable by half a score of clever physicians, and was acth paid the $1,000 disability claim allowed y the Royal Templare lof Temperance. Elsewhere in the issue is givo en the particulars of a cure in Cape Breton, which is quite as remarkable as that of Mr. Marshall. The articulars of the case are taken from the alifax Herald, but they are also vouched for by Mr. Richardson, the editor and proprietor of the Island Repor- ter, Sidney, C. 13., who says that in not a single particular is the story overdrawn. TVe fancy we hear some reader say, “ Oh, pshaw! this doesn’t interest me.” But it does. The story as told elsewhere is worth reading, and we will guarantee before you are through with it you will be thoroughly intereste . ' That Boy. The young rector (in evident embarrass. mcut)-â€"â€"“ My dear Miss Clara, I"-â€"try1ng to leave his chairâ€"“I believe I have form- ed unâ€"attacbment, and ” Miss Clara (blushing furiously)â€"“ 0h, Arthurâ€"I moan Mr. Greenâ€"this 1s so unexpected. I mustâ€"” The young rector (frantically) â€"“ Beg pardon. Miss Clara, but I was about to say I have formed an attach- ment for this chair due to the presence of a bit of cobbler's wax placed here by that un- regeuerate brother of yours.” [Intense dc. light of the small boy in ambush.] A Pleasing Sense ‘ Of health and strength renewed and of ease and comfort follows the use of Syrup of Figs, as it acts in harmony with nature to effec- tually cleanse the system when costive or billions. For sale in 750 bottles by all lead- ng druggists. Editorial Resignation. A provincial editor, in retiring from the control of a newspaper, prints this vuledic- tory address : “.It is with a feeling of sadness that we retire from the active editorial con- trol of this paper, but we leave' our journal with u. gentleman who is abler than we are, financially, to handle it. This gentleman is well known in this community. He is the sheriff." A CAPE BRETON MIRACLE :A CASE THAT FAIRLY OUTRIVALS ' THE WONDERFUL HAMILTON i CURE. Hopeless, nclplcss, and Given up as “One Who Must Soon Go.”â€"â€"An'lnteresting- Story as Investlgctea by a. Reporter. Halifax Herald, December 16th. A few months ago all Canada was as- tounded by a remarkable cure reported from the city of Hamilton, Out., and vouched for by the press and many of the leading residents of that city. In the Hamilton case the man (a Mr. Marshall). .had been pronounced incurable, and after rigid exsmiuation by half a score of physi- lcirrus, the Royal Template of Temperance paid him the $1.000 members of that order ’are entitled to when pronounced totally in- capacitated from labour. The remarkable ‘ narrative of Mr. Marshall’s cure and the remedy to which he owed his recovery were given wide publicity by the press through- out the Dominion, and naturally it brought a ray of hope to others who ware similarly Isuffering. Among the homes to which it ,thus brought hope was that Of Mr. Joseph Jerritt, of North West Arm, 0.13., and Mr. ' Jerritt’s recovery may be regarded as even more marvellous than that of Mr. Marshall, and many others whose cures have recently been recorded. Ono thing, however, is Certain, and that is that never before in the history of Cape Breton has medicine wrought such an almost miraculous cure. In the year 1879 Mr. Jerritt received a fall from a truck waggon, the wheel of which passed over tht small of his back. Those avith him succeeded in restoring him to con- sciousness and took him to his home which ,Wae nearb . For six months he was un- 'able to per orm any work and even after the dance of a year was troubled with severe pains and Weakness of the limbs. He was phle, however, to do light work about the farm, and abouts year later ship ed on a vessel bound for Charleston, SC. Vhilc on this trip Mr. Jerritt was engaged in furliog a sail, when he overreached himself, and felt something start. as though something had burst in his left side. He became al- most helpless, and on the arrival of the ves- scl at Charleston, he was taken to the hos« pital for medical treatment. Here he re- mained for over two months under the most skillful physicians. His side became strong again, but his limbs grew weak and fre- quently the pains were intense. Mr. Jer- ritt then returned home. He continued to grow worse and the pains nOVer left him. After his return home he made an attempt :to work but had to give it up, and gradu- “ally became worse and worse until at last he was entirely helpless and was look upon by his frlsnds as one who not only could not recover, but whose time on earth was short. It was in this condition. depressed in mine. helploas, and continually suffering intense gun. that at last a ray of he s cups to him. as day he read in the Ila xfax III-raid of Mr. Marshall’s remarkable cure. Symptoms in this case were those of his own. and des- pite the fact that he had already expended hundreds of dollars in patent medicines and , medical treatment, without receiving any Ibenetit, be determined to try the remedy that had restored Mr. Marshall to health. . lThe result is that he is again restored to lhealth and strength. Hearing from various ' urea of Mr. Jerritt’s remarkable recovery the local reporter determined to invest' ate :the matter. and gives his story as tol to him. “ In my early days," said Mr. Jen pin. " I was one of the strongest young men pa our village. Until I received the {all In ’18791 did not know anything about sick~ .neu. and after that time 1 oil not know a lpsrfectly well day. I and to tight the J rs, and there could be i . . . . I no doubt as to the entire reliability of the : tried but none did me any permanent good. } The physicians of our place said that m ‘ again resorted to trouble OE and to work, and partially suc- needed up to the time I received the strain. ton. Since then my limbs have continued to grow worse until I was compelled to give up work altogether, and send for a doctor. I may add that all kinds of medicine were disease was locomomr ataxy and althoug several of them treated me, none gave much hope of recovery 3 in fact the impression he- came general that ‘poor Joe must soon go.’ After the failure of Doctor's treatment I _ patent medicines of which I believe I have taken $500 worth. Still my disease grew worse and finally I was un- able toeven move from my bed. I was ad- vised to again go to the hospital in Halifax, and after spending two months there I re- tnrned home only to find myself even worse than before. My legs became so weak that I could not stand alone having to use two was between life and death. My left leg swolled to an enormous also and the doctors pronounced it dropsy. My feet and legs have been cold for over five years until the last three months. It was impossible for me to sleep with the pain which would b continually in my legs and body. Must drafts Were applied, but no sooner would] they be taken off than the pain would re‘ I turn. About one year ago I lost all feelin from my legs ; they would feel like ice, and to move them caused the greatest agony. I , prayed that God would take me from this‘ ‘ world and give me relief from the torment _ which I was hourly in. Thus I lived ; not lived, but existed. a sufi‘ering being withoutl bue day’s relief from the most excruciating pangs from the disease.” How the face of the hitherto sufferer brightened as he began. to tell of the release, as It were, from death, and continuing, he said: “But from the blackest day of my hope shone when my little girl who brought home my paper read the advertisement of Dr. William's Pink Pills. I got her to read. to me the cure effected in the case of John Marshall, of Hamilton. As soon as she read the statements contained therein, I 'saw at once that his case was similar to mine and I'told my wife that I believed I would be a Well man again if I only could succeed in obtaining some of this medicine. Isentto our drug store but found none there, I then decided to send to Brockville, Ooh, for the Pills, but my neighbors Only laughed at me saying that they were just like all other patent medicines, no good, This was in August, I forwarded the money. and ina few days received two‘ boxes of Pills, deciding to give them a fair trial. 1 After taking them a short time the pains left me, and to day I am not troubled with an ache or pain. True, my limbs have not yet entirely rec0vered their former stren th ut it makes me runny to know that if vs a I boxes will enable- me. to stand with just a chairs to steady myself with ; I could not \ hear my weight on them. For five weeks I little assistance lmore will continue and complete the cure. Dead legs for a year are not easily made perfectly strong a 'sin, but,” l.erc Mr. Jorrit’t threw both legs Igh into the air, “this issomethiug myself or iny friends never hoped to see. All m l rcighbors gave me up for dead. but than 'Cod my strength is returning, and after ! hrce months I feel like anew man. You inced not fear to state my case plainly, as I am: well known in Cape Breton, and all the eople hereahout know how far gone I was. cores of the neighbors call to see me and re surprised to find that I am improving daily. My appetite has returned; my -btrength is renewed and when my limbs become a little stronger I shall be a healthier man than over. No doubt exists in my mind of complete cure as the worst sym- ' toms have entirely disappeared and I seem ‘nvigoratod by the medicine. You see,” he said to the reporter, “I am to work mending nets as I feel too well to remain die. Every person who saw me last July nd sees me now can bear testlmOny to the ruth of the story I am telling you. My eight since I began taking the Pills has Icreased from 125 pounds to 146 pounds bad I am heavier now than I have been for 'five years. Ihope what I have told you 'ill induce other suffers to try this wonder- l‘hl medicine, and I am sure they will have as good reason to feel grateful for it as I 0'" ' After the interview with Mr. Jorritt, the reporter called on a number of his neighbors, hll of whom endorsed his statements, and said they considered his cure one of the inc-st wonderful things that had come within their observation. They one and all gave the crcditto the treatment with Dr. W'ii- liam's Pink Pills, and are naturally enthusi- hstic in speaking of them. , ‘ The preprictors of Dr. Williams’ Pink ills state that they are not a patent medi- ' inc, but a scientific preparation the result bf years of careful study on the part of an ' minent graduate of McGill and Edinburgh Cuiversitics, and they had for many years peeu used in his private practice before he- og offered for sale throughout the country. They are offered to the public as a never failing blood builder and nerve restorer, cur- ing all diseases such as paralysis, rheuma- tism, sciaticis, palpitation of the heart, headache. pain and snllow complexion, mus- sickness a glimmer of, l FISHING IN THE WATERS OPT“ GREAT NOBTIIWET. .l Remarkable Industry. Already the value of the fish caught in the British Colombian waters is estimated at five million dollars a year, and yet the in- dustry is rather at its birth than in its in- fancy. All the waters in and near the pro- vince fairly swarm with fish. The rivers teem with them, the straits and fiords and lie abound with them, the ocean beyond is sighted with an incalculable wei ht of living food, which must soon be distri utcd among the homes of the civilized world. The principal varieties of fish are the salmon, cod, shad, Whitefish, bass, flounder, skate, sole, halibut, sturgeon, oolachan, herring, trout, haddock, smelts, anchovies, dogfish, perch, sardines, oysters, crayfish, shrimps, crabs, and mussels. Of other denizens of the water, the whale, sea-otter, and seal prove rich prey for those who search for them. The main salmon rivers are the Fraser, Sheena, and Nasse rivers, but the fish also swarm in the inlets into which smaller streams empty. The Nimkish, on Vancouver Island, is also a salmon stream. Setting aside the stories of water so thick with salmon that a man might walk upon their backs, as well as that tale of the stage.co .ch which was upset by salmon banking them- selves against it when it was crossing a fording-place, there still exist absolutely trustworthy accounts of swarms which at their height cause the lar est rivers to seem alive with these fish. n such cases the ripple of their back fins frets the entire sur- face of the stream. I have seen photographs that show the fish in incredible numbers, side by side, like logs in a raft, and I have the word of a responsible man for the state- ment that he has gotten all the salmon need- ed for a small camp. day after day, by walk- in to the edge of a river and jerking the fie out with a common poker. . There are about sixteen canneries on the Fraser, six on the Skeena, three on the Nasse, and three scattered in other watersâ€" Rivers Inlet and Alert Bay. The total canning in 1889 was 414,294 cases, each of 48 one-pound tips. The fish are sold to Europe, Australia, and eastern Canada. The American market takes the Columbia. River Salmon. Around million of dollars is invested in the vessels, nets, trawls, canneries, oil factories, .and freezing and salt-lug stations used in this industry in British Columbia, and about 5500 men are employed: “ There is no difficulty in catch- ing the fish,” says alocul historian, “in some streams they are so crowded that they can readily be picked out of the water by hand.” However, gill-nets are found to be prefer- able, and the fish are caught in these, which are stretched across the streams, and band- led by .men in flat-bottomed boats. The fish are‘loaded into scows and transported to the cannerics, usually frame structures built upon piles close to the shores of the rivers. In the canneries the tins are made, and, ‘ as ’a ' "rule, saw-mills near by produce the“ wood for the manufac- ture of the packing-cases. The fish are cleaned, rid of their heads and tails, and then chopped up and loaded into the tins by Chinamen and Indian women. The tins are then boiled, soldered, tested, packed, and shipped away. The industry Is rapidly ex- tended, und fresh salmon are now being shipped, frozen, to the markets of eastern America. and England. My figures for 1889 (obtained‘from the Victoria Times) are in all likelihood under the mark for the sea.- sohof 1890- The coast is made ragged by inlets, and into nearly every one a water- course empties. ‘All the larger streams are the haven of salmon in the spawning season, and in time the principal ones will be the bases of cunning operations. The dominion government has founded a salmon hatchery on the Fraser, above New Westminster. It is under the supervision of Thomas Mowat, Inspector of‘Fisherics, and millions of small fry are now annually turned into the great river. Whether the unexum- plcd run of 1889 was in any part due to this process cannot be soid,"but certainly the salmon are not diminishing in numbers. It was feared that the refuse from the cannerics would injure the “runs" of live fish, but it - is now believed that there is a profit to be derived from treating the refuse for oil and guano, so that it is more likely to be saved than thrown back into the streams in the near future. The oolachnn, or candle-fish, is a. valuable product of these waters, chiefly of the Fraser and Nusse rivers. They are said to be de- licious when fresh, smoked, or salted, and I have it on the authority of the little pamph- let “British Columbia,” handed me by a. government official, that “their oil is con- sidered superior to cod-liver oil, or any other fish oil known.” It is said that this oil is whitish, and of the consistency of thin lard. It is used as food by the natives, and is an article of barter between the coast Indians and the tribes of the interior. There is so much of it in a candle-fish of ordinary size that when one of them is dried, it will burn like a candle. It is the custom of the natives on the coast to catch the fish in immense numbers in purse-nets. They lcubu‘ weakness, etc. ‘ These Pills are 815‘" a 1‘ then boil them in iron-bottomed bins, strain. ’ §P9°lfi° for the t-r.oub.es peculiar '50 [emu-199: ' ing the product in willow baskets, and run- 'euch as 8“l’l’l'eml‘lnsi bearing down Pall-13: l ning the oil into cedar boxes holding fifteen chronic constipation, and forms of weakness uilding up the blood and restoring the glow fhcalth to pale and sallow cheeks. In the case of men they effect a radical cure in all cases arising from mental worry. overwork, or excesses of any nature. haution the public against imitations. These Pills are never sold in any form ex- cept in boxes, the wrapper around which bears the trade mark “ Dr. Williame' Pink Pills for Pale People.” They are sold by all drugcists or will be sent post paid upon receipt of price. 50 cents a boxâ€"by address- ing the Dr. Williams’ Medicine 00., Brook- ville. 0ct., or Morristown, N.Y. . The proprietors deem it their duty to lthcse shoals have not been explored or! HEALTH l l l The tramp has reached the hay-day Of his prosperity when he is allowed to sleep in the burn. a People in Kansas are said to be using quinineand untipyrine as stimulants in place pf lthe prohibited, but more innocent alco- l0 . cars in New York with clcctricty. It will cist from $30,000 to $100,000 per mile of double track. The existing cable roads cost from $150,040 to $300,000 per mile in that C rv. Edison says he will drive all the street gin, and have failed to 1 l gallons each. The Noose River candle-fish arc the best. They begin running in March, and continue to come by the million for a period of several weeks. Codfish are supposed to be very plentiful, and to frequent extensive banks at sea, but charted by the government, and private enterprise will not attempt the work. Similar banks off the Alaska coast are al- rendy the resort of Californiafisherman who drive a prosperous trade in saltiog large catches there. The skil, or black cod, formerly known as the “ coal-fish." isa splendid deep-water product. These cod weigh from eight to twenty pounds, and used to be caught by the Indians with book and line. Already white men are driving the Indians out by superior methods. Trawls of three hundred hooks are used, Have you Nenrnlgia ? If you are suffering the agonics of neural- get a remedy that will allord relief, we want you to try Pol- son’s Nervilinc. Noremedy in the market has given anything like the same degree of satisfaction. Its action On nerve pain 15 sim- ply marvellous, and as It Is put up in ‘25 The great treasury vault at Washington cent: bottles no great expense is involved in covers more than a. quarter of an acre and giving it a a triaL Polsou’s Nerviline is‘ , ., is twelve feet deep. Recently there was S 0,030.0le in silver stored there, an amount rim weighed 4,000 tons and would load 175 freight cars. i: the most pleasant, powerful, and certain pain remc y in the world. Sold by drug. gists and all dealers in medicine, 25 cents a bottle. in honorable and lucrative employment, in shop, store and office, in School and College a “New .E;’.._ and the fish are found to be plentiful, ”(gentile B. F. P. 00008 DROP. Ask; especially of!" the we‘st coast of the Queen Charlotte Islandaâ€"{From "Canada’s El Dorado,” in Harper’s Magazine. Dame Nature is a Good Book-keeper. She don’t let us stay long in her debt be- fore we settle for what we owe her. She gives us a few yeam' grace at the most, but the reckoning surely comes. Have you neglected a cough or allowed your blood to grow impure without heading the warnings! Be wise In time, and et the world-famed Dr. Pierce’s Golden edical Discovery, which cures as well as promises. As a blood-renovator, a lung-healer, and a cure for sorofulous taints, it towers above all others. as Olympus overtops a mole-hill. To warrant a commodity is to be honorable and above deception, and a uarantee is a symbol of honest dealing. on get it with every bottle of the Discovery." By drug- gists." Pee le who wait for appreciation are in great uck to get it even in the form of an epitaph. The Mythological Fates. “ Somewhere upon the unknown shore. Where the streams of life their waters pour. There sit three sisters, evermoro Weaving a silken thread." Lovers of all classic paintings are familiar with that famous group, called the “ Three Fates.” Fate seems cruel when it deprives women and girls of health. But in Dr. Pierce's Favourite Prescription they find a cure of untold value for nervous prostration, sick headache, bearing-down pains, bloating, weak stomach, antoversion, restoversion, and all those excruciating complaints that make their lives miserable. All who use it praise it. It contains no hurtful ingredients, and is guaranteed to give satisfaction in every case, or its price (31.00) will be re- funded. If the eyes are the windows of the soul, it is fair to assume that the lids are the shutters. A Complete Collapse ‘ is occasioned in our feelings by derangement. of the liver, stomach and bowles. Dr Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets ’cure sick and bilious headache, bowel complaints, internal fever and cost-iveness. They remove. all waste matter, and restore health to body and mind. A dose, as a laxative, consists of one tiny, sugar-coated Pellet. Cheapest and easiest to take. a vial. A fashion note to be observed is, that gross Widows should not wear weeds. It never fails. Adam’s Wild Cherry 8'. Licorice Tutti Frutti for a cough or cold. gold by all druggists ‘81: Confectioners; 5 cute. Even the illiterate man finds pleasure in a bookâ€"if it’s a plump pocket-book. ' ‘ ' By druggists, 25 cents Graduates and students of Alma Ladies. I College, St. Thomas, Ont, may now be found from the Atlantic to the Pacflc, in both Canada and the United States. Scores are teaching successfully and othersenminglarge salaries as Stenographers or Bookkeepers. A 60 pp. Calendar sent on application to PRINCIPAL AUSTIN, B. D. A Christmas storyâ€""I didn’tcxpect any- thing this year.” Did the firemen hung up their hose? A blind fortune-teller is advertised in one of our exchanges, but how can a. blind man be a. good seer? . GIBBON'S TOOTHAQ‘IIS GIT“. For sale b7 szfisbs. Price 15c. “ Some of the best. poems in the English language are now and then u foot short,” says It contemporary. ’em sent in a foot long. “'c frcguently have ma:-«« l . CA5 N WE FOUND ' A GAIN OF A rOUND A DAY IN 'rnr: CASE or A MAN WHO HAS BECOME “ALI. RUN nowN.” AND HAS BEGUN TO TAKE THAT REMARKABLB FLESH PRODUCER, is l 'r rust on . u . Hypophosphites of Lime 8: Soda l I IS NOTHING UNUSUAL. THIS FEAT l was new PERFORMED oven AND oven AGAIN. PALA'rAsLs As MILK. EN- nossnn sv PHYSICIANS. Scor’r’s EMULSION lS PUT up ONLY IN SALMON CCLOR WRAPPERS. SOLD BY ALI. DRUG- crsrs A'r 50c. AND snco _ SCO TTér’ BO WNE, Ballet/ilk. llllBllSl All] - imam) " AD‘XMS‘ TUTTI FRUTTI GUM nrcoamsuncn Iv 'm: HIGHEST MEDICAL AUTHORSTIIZS. AIDS DIGESTION, lNVlGORA-TES THE SYSTEM, STRENGTHENS THE VOICE, lMPROVES THE APPETITE. :3- Sold by all Druggists and Confectioners, or i Addressâ€" 5' The Tutti Frufli A. ll. 00., 60 gangs 813 l Toronto, Ont, for Box of assorted sump es, wh ! will be sent by mail to any address on receipt of ' 25 Cents. A Day. ! ruggist. Grocer. or ConfecLlo for them. Manufactured to th . nary Coxrsmoxanv Cl; . 'I‘ororste “33m BMW urn --â€"____._._____“.______ GA FIELD TEA cue Constipation Sick Headache. restores th Com GotFreeSam 10 at Gammo'l‘na lexion. Church St.. route. ,AerMAounrrms 1.. F R E E ttla DR. TAPPBROS. ROCHES- TER, KY. Canadiggobept. 1&3 Aelaids St. w.. scam). CANADA. ____..___â€"â€"_____.._.__.‘ UR bEW BOOK “ House and Home.‘ a complete houscwll'c's guide by Marion Han lood, the greatest living writer on household mattem.arocosénizcd authoriti in all domes- ticaffairs. Sea for illustrat circul terms. WM. 1351005. Punusnm Torotiirflo.wd _.____.______________ HAVE YOU Eile‘ilm‘i‘l‘i.“ ‘i°““l‘.x mt“ fipetito, Wasting-e: helium-.3 Pb? whine: sure now remedy Addrc.‘ l. .'. '32. "9 St. Lawrence St. inonlredl’. 30‘ ‘ X'DTNG now of into in .‘ 1000 wanted to takb up cuttln “disc: rotcssion. There is no better trade. 20 to per week. regular wages. Full urticul‘trs on an lication. TORONTO dh'n‘" ' . SOHO L. 88 King St. West, Torontama FINâ€"r3 DEGDRATED TINWARE MACDONALD MANUFACTURING CITY :8! King Street East. Toronto WATSON’S COUllll DROPS Are the best: in the world for the Th Chest. for the voice unequalled. root and R. or. W. Stumped on each drop. ARTIFICIAL urn J. DOAN 8:. SON. For Circular Address, '77 Northcotc Ave" Toronto . LADIES USE llllllUULOUS WATER If you wish l:o.bo beautiful. Cleorstho com- plex10n.curcsl’Implcselc. Price 500. by post. Ask your druggist for it or write to 1’. BRUNET. 31 Adelaide “3. Toronto. WWALL DIRECT IMPORTER OF FINE GUNS, RIFLES SHOOTING SUITS,HUNTING BOOTS,BTC. LOADED'CARTRIFOES. ART’FIGIAL R S A - TRAPS A SPECIALTY. Bl D NO 31 YONGE STREET, TORONTO. ART IN have R‘rfs'fivc Is attracting the interest of readers to what we have to any. To-day we want your address and fifty cents In postage stamps for a copy of our Catalogue Album 0830!. We Want Name and “teas of Every ASTH MAT! O P.Hareldliayec,l.n. BUFFALO. u. v. , ofWatchcs, Diamonds. Arms and Ammunition. “A Work ofART." including mdny illustrations andinr formation of value to every sportsman. Address. FRANK S. TAGGART a Co. 39 KING 51. WEST. - - TORONTO KEEP "THE OOLZA OUR fiN/TT/NGR @z- MACH/M_ Zislz Z/O‘urEhTEiiianac/linc ag’t. _ for at, or send a 3d. stamp ,,« for. particulars and price list. THIS IS (:00!) F0". $2. SEVD ON THIS to CfRE'E'LJlIAN 13130.5". 1,215., _.lfff‘rs. , Georg/clown, Ont. MONEY! ,MQNEXL .Nrmsfl LOllOOll inn resuming LOAN All! sensor on g9“ W 103 Bay Street. Toronto. ,__..__.._.._._.....__,_..-....a Capital. . . ............ . . . . $5,000,000. Money to Loan on improvod farms. city and town property on liberal terms of repay. mcntund .‘l’l‘ LOWES'llt UImNNI'uA'I'ns. MUN Cll’AL DEBEN'l‘URl-ZS l’L nellASI-zn. Apply to local appraisers or to J. I". KIRK, Manager. Choice forms forsale in Out. drMaultoba Frill-Ill PEill‘llhlllllT Loam and Savings Company. _........-.â€" Invested Capitol, - .._. .-.._... 12,030,000. The ample and increasing resources of this Company enable its Directors; to make ndvnn- cc-ion Real lisiurc securities to any amount without delay, at the lowest current row of interest. and on the most favorable terms. Loans granted on improved farms and on productive town and city proper! ins. Mortgagcsmnl Debentures pnrclm-tcd. Application maybe mndo tnrough the loca. Appraisers of the Conumny or to J. Herbert Mason, Managing Director. Toronto ._â€"â€"_ ...-...__... Tu: lusncvzn USES srAnnAnu Bro? CHOPPER FRENCH Bonsai!- ._. ::::: Send postal for now Clrcular {or 1891. WATEROUS ENGINE WORKS 00. BRANTFORO, 0A8 . . - 1 '1‘ tlons guaranteed. Salary and Expenses Pom. ecu- - , _ Mar advantages to beginners. Block vomplete. with Iasmlllnl mealtimes. 4â€", OUTFIT FREE. We guarantee «that we admins. Writs nrwwrz 4.: BROS. 130., Nursery'lnen. Toronto, Ont. , 3., ,ms. .‘1’ ‘3' 2-» 4.591%”: 0113154328511 s arm ““7. u (This boom ll rename:

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