‘1. the BERLIN. ON, the GEM MEAN Pianos and 01 Mid/7'6 mg 3nd roman WI :23 up swam m: {heav- netcashtoranmyzooda- II You will need some’d rline cf Dairy applian eason. Assumingthi certainty, it is eqm n that you will ‘ y by buying from i am showing the st in reliable, law-53 :r Chumsâ€"the “ ' 11¢" and “DairyMaid ,ces at >er, Lace 5, Span- ’ackl ngs. It ?Ml1ble Price! and One thco 0m :sseac and Peel-std annnaâ€" { -.. I. I E E 9.... ELTINI L, ng Plow MARIN S People . paper. ox:"i93c95 of onion growers t a; grich sandy loam is plefer- 1:: we West, onions ale success- J; on “sage brush†land. Such and not calpulated to stand INS, I; a reliable, labor-53 turnsâ€"the “ {in small trench betweea 't.l;u~.t<. For flooding, the am lam wt! in beds from 10 in ‘2') it. in width, and about 1:. 'l‘no size of the beds will aunt-what by the water "Lg Mud of water can be got {mot-r beds to advantage aireuni. The 7'0 m»: PERFECTLY LEVEL â€wt to have them level “ though they may if the beds are at- soil can be wet to , K Water may be turn- ‘keepe‘r his an inch deep all :35“ would be equiva- IL "I; to 2 in.. or it may lion: of 6 in.. accord- Uts of the case. If W ine, the lower end _f‘nailO\\'il)z the water _. “Head will receive at Univ}, ’cï¬ofne packed. ““01â€?“ moisture enough his K. 91) antmg to germinate . ~ . Operator can regu- "We do not know enough about the question to dogmatize," said he simply. “ We shall see what he shall see.†Outside of the products named in the talk reported last week. the proved re- sults of synthetic chemistry appeared to he already numerous. The oil of bitter almonds is now being made direct, com- mercially, as is the oil of mustard. In fact. mustard made from the latter is preferred for use as an irritant by many physicians in consequence of its purity. which is perfect. whereas the natural mustard contains other compounds not entirely desirable in this connection. Salicylic acid, tartaric acid, the acid of unripe grapes. and citric acid, the sour principle of lemons and other fruits, are made direct. Artiï¬cial turpentine is be- ing actively sought after. and chemists ' expect to obtain artiï¬cial cuoutcnouc. Long before the promised failure of the rubber trees to supply the demands of commerce, synthetic rubber will in all hier and the ground 1 probability have tilled the void. From a review of what synthetic ‘ chemistry has already done, the profes- sor passed to the subject of what it l)l.t_\‘ 9 reasonably be expected to do. He Sum : l Apply to -J "5“", a“ m“ "’7 10080 and absorlys h more rapidly than lqter m A. 3°01! after irrigating as ' drymrhaps 2 days. more or “for. iï¬ 1"“ had time to bake, Yet "ml “)0 Wheel hoe, just the surface. Then it. is fol- °.“!“Vator teeth. I: then cOughuon until dry enough a110mm- ifligu; 3933011. ““3 leaves the 9““.an Operafur can regu' "fan migating before plow- ‘gm‘md contains an abun- F'P‘m when the seed is sown {"49 â€New, to irrigate for her the phnls are up, but the m? to apply the water must Lad by 911011 indxvidual case. Sum-lemon: or WATER wwm be very .ligpt, _ns . Y»- I--_ .razlou will last for three I‘Clmu the tops begin to full mg more is done with them sting. \Vhen the tops have ow and are all dried up next n. the onion is ripe. When gafï¬clently, three rows are turown into one and allowed week. Then pile in round- of 6 to 10 bu. and allow to 1-) days. An ordmary cellar sand warm to keep onions An union will stand any de- 3. but m“ not stand repeated .md thawing. To prevent keep just above the freezing 3 lurker, should determine the wax-Lanes to plant, either of the w or winte. Begin seeding as ,'::c spring as the soil can be ï¬red the bed as soon aspre- Ll bcfore the surface soil dries. 5 Le covered from £- to i1 in. mer more, and the rows run :gaziutm‘e cultivation mav be BPS BY IRRIGATION. in; there are two methods the water which are entire- flooding and furrow irriga- ding means the complete the soil by having the beds :0 as to conï¬ne the water. :ation Consists in running 1a small trench between plan“. For flooding, the ‘bo Ian-i off in beds from 10 2:120 H. in width, and about :. Tue size of the beds will -somcwhat by the water lug brad of water can be got gmder beds to advantage ï¬-menm. The L; cream of Cod-liver Oil, :0 give your system its need- ed strength and restore your health? Weight. Physicians, me world over, endorse 1t; condensed advertisements man In Same. teachers vented tum tor-do ‘3 eight uncut 81.00 mi: to: three or one. It more men eight line: u: proportionate chemo In mule. discount to merchants to: bushes ante by the year or for a shorter :23 made known on application. SON 8 Wit-301‘. Proprietors. ADVIBI’IflllG ILTII. not!" be deceived by Suhsflhms! wlm‘m' Donovan. momma. 80:. cu. 3:11:th and not calculated to stand :11. '51}: it will produce ï¬ne crops mmted and properly fertilized. massnch as the edge of mea- mguzproduce a large crop, but RSCBS are there will be many 5, m planting select level land, m weeds. Seed to carrots, par- } nomtoesin the spring and cul- I ée of weeds. Carrots grow deep ' juwthe soil. thus leaving it in 1 â€ion; corn leaves too much When harvested in the fall, t “J! away all rubbish that can with a. wooden rake. Just beâ€" wz weather plow moderately u no: line (loud )mm}. m :mmuuohlmmtmm notices In local columns. 100. 38133031008 So. each lubuqmt g: to or plank scraper SM 6 ad with plow handles should Elly to make the ï¬eld perfect- From 30 to 60 loads of well- nure should be applied pa. ding the manure evenly, plow Publggzgzjg’ Notice‘ Emulsion â€Etott’s; 'if you are losing flash your at is drawing on your tent strength. Something Watch w Weight: Sand! Law Is Preferableâ€"Such CANADIAN POST. [are cultivation may be The plautswill begin to .3 to 20 days; cultivation egin and be continued When 4 in. high, thin ‘TURE 0F ONIONS 3v ARTIâ€" new. RAIN. â€a Properly Fertilized‘ FOUR HAXD “'EEDINGS produce Fine Crops When 4?. AUGUST 17. ?89-£ adiau 33115 Ian. :11: i’: Em Fa W. WILSON. ' Prof. BertheI<_,)t the famous Fiench chemist. told us lately, in a t: 111: which Irepoued 21 few days ago. something :1: rout his idea regarding the fabrication 101’ the stup'es 01' human food in the ; CneinisL’s 141,01 aton’ and the possible ex- 1:11ction tin 1319 1y o. the whole industry i of agricmtnre. It is not alone so the pro- : nuctiou of t: :1: natural food compounds ;:1|ru;ul_\ in familiar use howeve1, that ‘ Irmi. Bouhelot thinks t' :at the chemist will advance. 3;"lk-rhaps,†said he, as our talk contin- uul, "the greatest i111portnnce. and cer- tainly the profoundest charm, in the study of synthetic chemistry is the cer- tain evidence which it offers of the dis- covery and manufacture of many com- pounds 11ow entiiely unknown, whose 1 eflect up 1'1 human health. human lite, and human happiness no one can permi- bly conji ctuxe. Aimed “ith the ele- ments and with the knowledge of the laws by which classes of c-1n1plex com. pounds combine with other classes of complex compounds. it will go on and on, developing new ï¬xed Compounds not yet met \\ i111 111 nature. whose influ- enc: upon human life, as I have said, no mind cm] possxbly_ foreiella †“W but do you think of T_\' ndull 5 dog- m:,x that from the non- -living the living can never be obtained. "†:Im m>m4I immrm <<Fr 2526: ~ >rr ._.Im ImZ‘ <<m 2mmo. Puncher Glimpses of the Golden Age LIFE WILL THEN BE‘EASY run to waste and :1. portion of the piied fertility washed away. A tri each system on a small sca’le will enable each grower to decide whic best for Ins individual use. â€'0‘ " 0 every foot of ground and of being able to put in the crop without leveling up the ground so much ; while there is the disadvantage of luwing so much water L'sâ€"Man Will v“... .. "n. .wu .kuuo um moisture Det- ter. In flooding there is the disadvan- tage of having the space between each bed waste ground and constantly grow- ing a crop of weeds. In furrow irriga- tion there is the advantage of using Which Prut‘. Berthelut Sees Ahead 0! 5 Now for the mode or applying the water, The row: eheuld be about 14 in. : apart. Run the “Planet. J 1:,†cultiva- tor between each row and the peculiar o ' shape of the teeth will leave a small tur- row at the eame time not throwing enough dirt on either side to interfere l. with the plants. Through each one of " these furrows run a very small stream ', of water, juet euflioient to keep running " but not large enough to overflow rte I hanke. Tine water passes 01! and must p have an outlet and ehould run in the ' furrows until it has soaked the soil to l the center of the rows (per haps six'hours more or less). After the ground is suf- ï¬ciently dried it is cub-hated in the sumo m-unuer as described in “flood- ing." These furrows between the rows can be made With the wheel plow or by I running the cultivator with three teeth, or they can also be made by walking backward and dragging a common hoe with one point digging the ground in a V shape. In Southern California the flooding system is used exclusively. I believe the same is also true of the Mexicans through New Mexrco. Arizona and: the Southwest who have been practicing ir- rigation for generations. Some prefer ‘ the furrow system, claiming it does not bake and pack so badly as by flooding. But ground that is sandy enough for onions will stand flooding if properly handled. Of course it will not do to flood the ground and then allow it to dry and bake without stirring the soil. Flooding is quick work and more evenly regulated. You can turn on what water you choose, cut it off and pass on to the next bed. Tnere is no waste of water. there is no fertility washed away, and I believe the soil retains the moisture bet- I l 3i 1‘ {FOR FURROW IRRIGATION. the oniom are planted on level ground. tho same a: whore irri ation Is not prac- ticed, The rows shoal be hid out so as to have a fall of from 6 to 12 in ovary 10 rods. Whore tho land is quite sloping the ï¬rst row may ho Ind with a triangle (:1 wooden tram. in tho shape of a lotzor A. measuring 12 it from base to bus and having a- lamb-bob in the cantor) with o {all of {in to every 12 It. Thou ovary other row on be run by this, I! tho loll in loss than 6 in to 10 rods the water will be too slow in 3: “in through; on tho othor hand. i! the ful much exceeds 12 in the soil wlll wash av!!!- _ -“_v -_-v. .vy-lvâ€" I" ' full. ' are of computation. ', Thalia? but of the «not: the are ‘ will 1:“ fltilg one. 3 rock an ' aomotimu t 00 (depending a. great deal . upon the characur of the soil). Toward I mo latter part of the 508301: it is unne- cessary to be .0 particular :bout stirring I the soil after each irrigation, When ’ the first onions begin to mu down irriga- [ tion should com. owed notion 01h tho unto-ghost. It nod mollowing o 1'; mm the chum ad .300- “ion. The cultintor is upon unm'atiu gnd .iltolligpznt la _rogoivu if! I“ “6 _---“‘A ‘ Become Too Win (or A trial bf wiIl best which is by met ods already foreseen and un- necessary to describe, u e shall store and make use of the heat of the sun. But greater. {zu- greater. in importance than this Will be the ultimate and Widespread use of the central heat of our globe. "The incessant advances of science give us a sure basis upon whicn to ex- poet a limitless amount of energy drawn from this suurce. It will sufï¬ce, to utilize the central heat. to sink pits. from 3,000 m 4,000 meters (3.300 to 4,400 yards) in depm. an I this is a problem or engmeeflfl; quite within the powers of the engjueep of ihe future. At this Luna We pliuuld ï¬nd great heat, gog- .ap Time is not an element in tlzese specu- lations.†continued Prof. Berthelot, “bo- cnuse all the future is before us and the line of march is marked out. Great changes, however, which will clxeupen the cost of producing these results will come from cheaper and simpler sources of mechanical energy than those now used. Herein lies the fundamental problem of all the industries, to discover sources of energy which are inexhausti- ble and which wrll renew themselves without eï¬'ort on our parts Nuture has given us these ready for our use. but us yet we have accepted only a very small portion of her git t. Evolution has long acted in this direction also, and must continue to act. \Ve have seen the force of human hands largely replaced by that of steam, that is to say, by chemical energy borrowed from the combustion of coal. Coal. however, is laboriously extracted from the bowels of the earth. The time _is coming yuan,- "To make meat we must make these compounds, or so many of them as are necessary. That chemistry will suite day be able to make them I cannot doubt. That at some time in the future artiï¬cial meat will infringe upon the domain of natural meat. as artiï¬cial butter has upon that of natural butter, is only to be reasonably expected. So :wrth the vegetables. A potato Consists of, say, 81.844 per cent. of starch, 13.030 per cent. of water, 2.313 per cent. of nitrogenous matter. 1.13 per cent. of woody ï¬bre, and minute proportions of (at and mineral constituents. When we are able to make starch direct, what will hinder us from making a potato? Its construction is agreeably simple. And what is to prevent us, once we have gained the mastery, from making better milk. better meat and better potatoes. at any season of the year, than theme which nature gives us, more or less afflicted as they are with impurities and additions. and produced only at the periods in ‘ which her laboratories are kept open {or the public good ? past. Tue mass of animal tissue is con- smuted by certain nitrogenous com- pounds, which plny an equally impor- tant role in the development of . vegetable tissues. These compounds are [very complex. nearly always ï¬xed and ‘uncrysmllizuble, and easily alfected by re-ageuts. Some are Iolublc and some insoluble, but most of the former be- come insoluble by coagulation in wucer, through heat or through the action of acids. Such are albumen. ï¬briue, casein. syntonine, osseiue, chondriue, gluliue, chitine, etc. ' “There is no reason why it should not be. With the vital station and vital machinery by which the cow produces the milk chemistry has nothing to do. It is a. question of physiology. Whon the milk has left the cow, however, it is merely a chemical compound, and with it physiology has nothing to do. As I said, the fats I have already made direct. The milk-sugar, too, has been made. When we come to the casein, however, and with it to starch, meat and albumen, we come into a. set of very complex chemical problems. Still, they are merely chemical problems, and as such are subject to study and solution in the future, just as we hux u seen equally l difï¬cult problems inst gum solved in the “Will such mili Be an healthful as thafflpatuyally produced ?†“There is no reason. nevertheleu, since we are making artiï¬cial butter, why we should not before long make artiï¬cial milk. Milk consists of, say, 3.50 per cent. of milk fatsolein, stearine, butyrine, palmitine and others, 398 per cent. of casein, 4 per cent. of milk-sugar, and 86. 87 per cent. of water. with traces of other substances winch have been determined. It will not be a very dim- ï¬cult problem for synthetic chemistry to mingle these constituents in these pro- portions, and make a mill: that will as nearly approach natural mill: in meet- ing tne demands and desires of the pub- lic as artiï¬cial butter approaches natural butter. So. too, the variation of propor- tions would be easy and asses’ milk, goats’ milk, or any other milk desired could be furnished from the same laboratory as easily as caws’ mils. The onlv necessity is that we shall be able to malts all the solid constituents mention- ed, and this is simply a matter of time. In short, mill: factories may be looked for just as soon as the constituents can be uirectly and cheaply obtained.†ls rea'dy 'dnd the commercial condition: have been met, artificiel chemical food will infringe upon the sphere of the natural in other direction. Nature, however. produces very cheaply, and no man will desire to lose money for the pleasure of making chemical food. poï¬nd; â€"_â€"" -._._, - Dzmoo 3nd min can never ’gamn our -_ _-,_ nmâ€"- v lives prowl} While we use thin Compound we on never an. Onmard than ye wen-y. etc. CohiEoï¬id." """' ‘ 'â€"' ' -....., Saved them from the new: the: compueed them wound. Onnrd been ye ween-y. etc. Onwu-d then ye people, beaten to the sound! Water: 1111 follow Pelne'e Celery Com- Ikoig V 7 That remedy of virtue. Palne’a Calm swath reg-1n, Patten: balm Ind pleuuro will for u- tom-1n. 0::qu than ye weary. etc. Thorandu of our people who one. Inflated 0BR. NowArejoioo In 7130:. m1 robust 5nd h'gh'g' ' "" "â€"" "' "" The litany-down und wound. III will kUIot'l" mum†Compound. which on It wm Imng'lhondylgorulntoold sad It '31“;ng the body. strontium nono- “strung. Onward than yo wen-y. nervous. weak Ind polo, Use um mighty Compound, whloh on nova: nu. By this Compound’l porn. to!) duo-u mun fly. Hoopla win 1mm bmo’u Indian 0.1qu an n weary. nervous, walk and Paine’ s Celery Compound Makes thaty Sick and Diseased Body Heal- thy and Strong. Music Soothes the Soul. I THE CANADIAN POST. LINDSAY. ONTARIO. FRIDAY. AUGUST 1~ 7894‘ t v------~â€" vvvvvvvvvvv 'Jvâ€" “cw n salt and 813.000.000 I you on gar. Greek sculptou often used ayes 0! gas or crystal in the {too of Wei: na- 1110’. A suflorer from mum at Glendale. Ba" has not slept in I bed (or twenty 'l‘he British school of wntor color painting is deemed to be the best in tho uorld. _ The annual taxes of the world aggrg- guy: the enormous sum of $4,850,000,- There are 13.000.000 men of military use in the United States. The size of a woman’s shoe should be just lutll‘ llmtof her glove. The normnl weight of the liver is be- tween three and [our pounds. The largest tobacco werebouee in the world is at Iï¬uierille. Ky. During digestion the flow of blood to the stomach is increased tenfold. The best specimens of alabaster Carv- tngs have been exhumed at Nineveh. A century old tortoise is exhibited in the museum at Uplands. in Colorado. United States ash commissioners are hatching 50,000,000 lobster eggs. The ï¬rst caricamrkt is said to luv. eon Antiphitus, an Egyptian, shout B. ears. 00. Genpany pgyg $}Q.990.990 a you taxes A flash of lightning equals 12000 homo-p0“ er. A single hair will bear a weight of 1,150 gr mm. In 1 89 C- inase subjects paid $24, 000.- 000 taxes on land. Tin-re are over 100.000 m militiu in the United States. A t: x was levied on out: in Persia until a few years ago. The lungs hold ï¬ve quarts 0! air. England has a tax on gravestone: A heavy dew is the precursor 0! min. Qucen Anne invented noulpoper duties. “Thesom manta-I of course†the professor "9% u: ociouco may surely be todroam sometimes. It it were not our dreams ,Wlu-re would be onrun PW to progress? ‘ Cull spiriluul chomisu'y. will duet-3; 7 means an profoundly to alter man's moral nuuu a material chemistry will change the conditzons of his environ- ment. There in no {car that art, beauty and the charm of human existence am destined to diuppou. I! the lurfnce of :11: earth can. to b. divided. and I may say disï¬gured lath. pomeuical devices of agriculture, will "pin in normal veuduro of wood. and flowon. Man be- coming “milk: with the principles 1nd responsibuitluol IdI-fovommom, will be more coil} 30 5e: "The herd preliminary work it done. The eyntheele o! the fate Ind oihl my- eel! nooompllehed your: ago. That or e the eugure and carbohydrate: is the study of the preeent time. and that or s the nitrogenoue corn unds ie not (u 03. Carbon from car nic acid. oxygen ' and hydrogen from water, and nitrogen from the ntr will be it source of food (or I all the world. \tht the animals and vegetables have produced through the energy of nature, we shall produce as well, if not better. by our etudy of un- tue’e lawl. Strange though it may seem, the day will come when men mll sit down to dine from his toothsome tan- let 0! nitrogenous mutter his portions of savory fut, his hull: of starch com- pounds hie custorful of aromatic spices. and His bottles 0! wine or epin'u which have been economically manufactured in his own factories, independent of ir- regular seesons. unutl‘ected by frost. and free from the microbee with which over. generous Nature. sometimes modiliee ' the value of her gifts." "And all title will be due to chem- ‘ ietry?’ â€1‘0 chemistry and her sister science. physics. If one chau- «t to base dreams, phophetic fancies, upon the {acts of KIT. present. one may dream of alterations in tho present conditions of human life. so great as to be beyond our Contemwrnry Couuption. One can loresee the «lump- peurnnoe of the beasts from our ï¬elds. necztuse homes will no longer be used for traction or cattle for food. Tue countless some now given over to grow- ing grain and producing vines will be agricultural antiquities, which will have passed out of the memory of men. The equal distribution of natural food nia- terinle will have done away with protoc- tiouism. with custom-homes. with un- I “At tbue depths}. said Prof. Berthe- lot, “we may easily tsp superheeted eteemunderpreesnrswhichcenhe need to drive machinery direct from the top or the shelt. Tint, however. is merely edeteil. We shell here in these pin the cheapest or inrneces becenss we can have them in any degree of heat, never telling end never needing iuel or re- newel. They will be et come disteuos from our enginee, to be sure. but thet will be no difï¬culty. Into them we cen introduce water, it necessery, convert it into super-heated steam et the bottom, end use it on the surface. More then ‘ this, the edvence o! thermo-electrio scienoeieoertein. once the inventions ere needed, to supply us. with mother end heps more Convenient meens of turn n; this heat into force end using it {or mechanical purposes at e cost, efter the plant is constructed. which will be no more then the weer end tear. We shall thus here e source oi energy which costs nothing. .Whoee ex- tent is indeï¬nite. which is 'iuosssently renewed. and whose diminution through centuries will be quite ixn rceptible. And this will be force wh ch will be eveilnble everywhere. ell over the globe, end equally the blessing with the pro- perty which results from it of all netlons end ell peoples which seek i use. Given such sources of one y.tlie tliicel pro- duction of food will e much simpler ‘ problem end will more rapidly fell into 3 the bends of chemistry. ‘ MISSING LINES. smut um unvuying, the but inch is the source of At our†3nd .11 life.†Tm wmar mlled having hi book ital-2e! by driplnz W810! ‘in and 1:13.; 3.200400: on]: of the Connect a. J. W. Du Mmuomymmt I990" wfluwhbhhtflnflhdfl we an no MM WIN“ 1‘ msyhom-mjmmolmou than hmnsthVnyuauu We! '3†woman. Rummy m at tho kind an! madly Pam'- Paul-000nm M work «than. mun-due MyIceo-xntbouou. Unloa- um: Pamm’aOar-Em. m its} by Win-Mum Gallant! mmmwwum m In). in mum. hum» “habitual!!!“ m- unable “can AMMâ€"Ade “talcum and u mun. um and w '11 mum-mm†mwhmmunma “(ma-advance. mm lulu RIMMMhdltlflIMmd . mound mammal-lulu. mags: pmmnmmmm not , Elvin-«858:3 ‘8 1805959. no.» asks: 3.38 SE 33853953 1323.205 .â€" gong-.9182: 63:84.36 823.383.: £525.83? agsggggag 30:82 at Eva.- §§.J988m3 v3 gBSSoanan-flgso 3§3¢§E:E§§ IRE Baalâ€"IA! nusâ€"55:83 in; .385 mm: mmmuMMm .muwumummzn a. lot Wmmcmh “hymen-pupa "much-M .inluaadogaatol: Mmmmmmm. lot at. flatâ€"Mp a!" (tulip d"). ‘ h wumdflwmrudutbby bomb†com m “11!than WWW-postman mummmmwm â€Mm uwmmmmm “Mmflnmwm mmmnmmwmm; mama-ho mute-aorta. mummmmmm 'GLKoodaOaJovelen: “Msnmbaotmlnnbmmud Mnmuundhellngahormmdbmm. mummmm Ieould get manure-tum mucous at tho pm Ila-sodsâ€: unwamm 5! § 5 E E E I Feel Lllio a New Inn. ' Innammmwum“m' mm enjoy paint not it B"!!!- I 111" MWMW Hood's m puma. Cm Stung.- with Eric I‘M- M Hood’s‘p‘ï¬â€™n‘ Cures New Ad vortiééhen ts. Am and again know by Hood'ocampanua. That Tired Fooling, Constipation and Pain in the Back Broken in Health Hood’s Sinaéï¬i 748181183 Hr. Chan. M “Wail. Ont B. SIMPSON. PHYSICIAN, Grun- glga‘ggm '3'. m d Mb UM†W Mal may vulva-iv. M. and at and 8% lbw-bd MIMI-82.. mom Namath.†DR. BURROWS. graham of MoGlll Cone... mu â€about 8h 10min I O Idem“. um umâ€. Â¥rw 191â€"16 )3. G. S. RYIBSON, OCULISI' and ADRIFT, WMMMâ€"“fl a yawn-n. mm. m No. 43â€"1: Mï¬ was a ANDERSON. Ion-am In" M. â€an WWW Btu mu. 9.x, mica [ml-cg. MCLAUGHLIN o W. “fl“. “ W and m w mm: 5% “our 300:. u. Intâ€"u. '8. J. a M. .(htu'lo. A «19mm “3;... 2:: Cl Sonata Notary. Rm. Ofllooaom non! moi Kant and York“. “may manual. MM 811mm Mom mm: STEWART, BARBIE- IF lE 31:30:33,111.“ of Np. _Y9rk), QW._H- 999- I!" 1.0. P- OK)! A. BARRON Q. 0.. (Solicitor Ill W Mk. one. am New. 1-... In. In. I- l Architect: and Suva ;ij._ 0283 JAEmS memento mm William-I... Had-u l'oD. can. Am. me. I â€â€â€œVmu TV VIIâ€, .3 m no will b. b' l h". [Jada-.7 G. E‘Kon' “or: us. â€mm-«aunt's»:- IM My 3. manual PHYSIOIAR, 8m 2391:. no. I'm. mum-«Luna ‘BANK L. SOLEERYILLE, 4 ..___ u __ 01’qu CHISHOLM, (moon ‘. WHITE. L941; symposium. Bus-um ‘IOMMERCIAL HOUSE 1m. luck 107.7 Ina-(Mn cm: STEWART‘ i. J EFFEBS, ‘ CHAMBERS, Oakwood. g. M I-t I†A“ VIORGE BRYAN. cameraman BUILDERS, G: OQYANA, Pins" ind Domini: n :gnynmhm angering, sou- Barn: ten. Ito. Manna. (Learn 81m. HART, L. D. .50 tall. Den a: try. D. n. CIIIIOLI Dental Surgeon, LINDSAY J. NEELANDS, VI Wt. â€MPH-300°. Cd ‘fl- “WWW Wm way? 2 2 mmâ€: mm m» J u .3? MONEY TO LOAN ,,___.__ “"â€" 30†L. m. emuâ€"wow Dominic-But m MAUIâ€. JmlMâ€"IQJI. i MIT “All A! m: gown: um um mu. ammonium. Alan hmmtdmtubglgg_o_u_ gun- nod-u. Nov, 10th. 131:3. ONEYLENTonMoI-tgagou. S ht Mahmmtm T318“ Whom Donovan II 06.3 __ 3003!: 40% utmmtmglUTUAL RESERVE m In the world. 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Jul! um. 1m .3: Soft Steam Coal LEXANDER DIXON. umuu wasps. HARD COAL [047M311 W/M‘S’. BARTEOLOMEW. Voter-Instr†Surgeon: [avg pagan; Ind q conï¬dent! Money to L0“. R, WEEK. Clerk of the Hon!- Wines and Liqumi gums.“ Cards A UCTI ONE E R. The Rath’bun ca '. 1‘. BROAD. now have a stock of