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The Clinton New Era, 1888-09-14, Page 6, 4.7e. • u • • We want to add one thousand new subscribers to our list, and as n4 • ment thereto we offer the paper to new subscribers from 1st Octo ,L • January mew ,\for 25 cep.' ts tea013. thratqe.141-pelit is the time to take ge oft14s low °Mrs R/. }Dr M a Publisher New Eras Clinton, 416 FRIDAY, SEPT. 14, 188B.. N b TEA,IPERANCE TOPICS I NEWS NOTES. • Sir John Macdonald was not at Beaverton on Thursday, and Hon Messrs Foster and Tupper repro- eented the Cabinet. Hon. Edward Blake has given $2,500 for scholarships in it he Department .4' -Political Science in foron U n versify. Mr W. S. Ashley. M. A. the new professor of political science for Toronto University, is expect- ed to reach here in the early part et' the week. • meta erg , inventor has pro. • WHAT A IAN'S EAR SHOWS. A TRUE STORY IN REAL LirE duced a shoe composed of wire • , — I net overlaid with alitub8I4111 rp- I Some of the richest men in 1 In China long ems are consider- IS me wawa LIVING? t sembling India rubber. 'T iese This question ims been asked so often shoes which cost about halt the that it has worn threadbare. Still it application is as pertinent, as when i price of leather, have been tested was first uttered. i th 0 ' d f d 8 in person or by letter, to the World's . meat was just ten doliars. (The name and post office address of the author of the foregoing truthful 1 narrative will befurpished pay ititerest- . • ed party who may apply,itherafor, either, t Dispensary DitedicalAssociation, of Buf At one time in my life I determined to pursue the study of medicine. Cir- cumstances compelled me to abandon it as a profession, still I had more or less practice among personal friends, suf- ficient to keep up my interest in it. One day I 'received a visit from a old friend, the Captain of a coastin steamer. He seemed much worried, and for a time made his visit anythin but pleasant. At last 1 said to him "Captain, you seem trouble] about something, can I aid you in any way?' "No I" he replied shortly, "at least don't think you can, and I have pretty good reasons for thinking so." - I felt hurt for a moment, and rathe angrily replied, "well, I don't have to. Of course you don't, he responded "but it is an infernal shame, and i makes me mad all through, when I think of the way that I have been bled by a lot of frauds, that call themselves doctors." Then he continued rapidly, "you know that boy of mine ?" I nodded. "Well, he has been a serious tax upon me for years, not that / begrudge him anything that he has cost me, but I do curse, every time I think of the hundreds of dollars, earned in the hardest manner, disappearing into the pockets of men who promised much only to do the worst kind of damage in the end." "Now, I have the cheerful prospect of having an undertaker's bill to pay, be- sides losing my boy." But, he added savagely, "I have spent the last dollar, that I ever will for medicine, and, as he has to die, the quicker the better." "You have no right to talk in that way, Captain," said I severely. "As long as your boy lives, it is your duty to do everything in your -power to aid him." "And haven't I ?" was his response ; "what is the use of your talking, you know just as much about curing him as the rest of them ; although," he added, "I believe you have a conscience;. the rest that I have had dealings with, don't pan out so well in that respect." "I tell you," he continued, "that boy is did, andthe doctors can write down in doomed; he will go just like his mother ----- their books of failures, 'one more death from consumption, a disease we know nothing about.' " He relapsed into a moody silence. At last I said, "is your boy very low, Cap- tain ?" "He can just crawl around," was his response, "and what makes the matter worse for me, is the pitiful way in which he asks me to try and do something for him. However, he will be here after awhile, and I want you, as a friend of mine, to tell me to the best of your knowledge, how long you think he is going to last, so that I can make my calculations.'' While he was talking, I saw the boy approaching, and just as he stepped into my office panting and gasping, from his exertion in walking, I said to my self, "the grip of death is too firmly fastened on you to be ever shaken off," After greeting him, at his father's re- quest, I examined him and found him in the condition that I shall describe. He had evidently inherited consumption from his mother ; bronchial tubes much thickened, so much so as to make the operation of breathing extremely dif- ficult and painful. Chest cavity much contracted ; auscultation and percussion showed extensive tuberculous deposits, end cavities, especially in the left lobe of the lungs; body much emaciated and bloodless. Ifact, unless (to my mind) some miraculous intervention occurred to stay the progress of the disease, the patient could not survive .. but a few weeks. I talked as cheerfully as I could to him, but he was too much de- pressed to pay much attention to any- thing but his suffering. The father sent him to a restaurant near by, and turning to me he asked. "Well, what is the verdict ?" I had been thinking rapidly, and as he spoke I had made up my mind to a procedure, as regards the boy, that I determined to follow out. In answer to 'his question, I said, "Captain, unless something is done for that boy, you will bury him within a month." "Well, what can be done ?" 'he said excitedly. "Do you. want to try your hand in experiment'? Do you want some of my money -too ? Are you going to sicken him to death with rotten cod liver oil,.blister his skin with plasters, drug him and rush, him into his coffin?" "Hold on, Captain," I replied ;' "I don't want your money, but I am going to try an experiment with your permis- sion. It is a matter of duty, and in hie condition, can do no harm, if it does no ggigd." -r•How much is it going to cost '4" he asked. "I don't know," was my reply "Whatevet. it is," he rejoined, "will come out of your pocket, not mine." Don't bother yourself about that," said I coldly. When the boy returned, he seemed more exhausted than when he first entered my office, and as his father handed him a chair, he said to his son, "Deli the doctor here thinks he can do you some good. Whet do you say; d ) want him to try?" I shall never forget the look on the boy's face, and his words, and the head- ing of this article cn me forcibly into my mind: " Is life worth living?" Evi- dently it was to him, as it is to all man• kind, when tortured with pain, with the clammy band of death encircling their throats, they struggle in his relentless grasp, and cry out ill an agony of terror, "far Cod's sake, save me," I put him on a nutritious diet, eggs and milk heading the list, and provided him with a preparation of medicine, that I had never used before, or ever expected tn. It was a sheer experiment on my part, as recklessly attempted as anything could be. The result—immediate im • provement in breathing and general strength of body ; better color, improved spirits, increased appetite, and an in- crease in bodily weight that was main- ishind. At the commencement of treatment he weighed 92 lbs. In two months, with constant progress to health, his weight had increased to 120 lbs. In three months he accepted a situation as an errand boy, indulged in running and boyish games of all kinds, a well boy if ever there was one. Ask him now if "Life is worth Ihing ?'", What was this wonderful prep tration ?" do you ask. As a matter of jight you should know, and I solemnly swear to the cor- rectness of my statcme»t. The boy is still in the land of the living, and well at that, and both he and his father will bark my statement. It MRS 1)1. Pierce's Golden Medical dis:•mrry, nod the entire cost of front- Rsgland owe all their wealth to beer. - And some of the poorest men there owe their poverty to A german paper states that 10,- 00.0 persons die in Germany every year from deli duns tremens, WI i 4t per cent of the convicts in the prisons are drunkards. Burlington Free Press : Johnson said that brandy was the liquor for heros,. which, if true, explains why so many men are heroes only to the bartender. -A disease called the "red eye' is afflicting people in some parts of Spain. It is no novelty in this coantry. It came with the first distillery, and has been growing ever since. The stomach eta whisky drink- er was on exhibition in London recently, and it did more for the cause of temperance than 100 lectures by weeping orators. It resembled a bootleg which had put in about twenty years in an alloy. ed an indicatioa of wisdom, and common people think they are the Emperor's ehief characteristic. Pliny saye—'When our ears do glow and 'tingle some do talk of us in our absence.' ItIollinaeus, an ancient writer, says—'if-his ears tingle 'tis a sure sign that others speak of' him.' In 'Much Ado About Nothing' we read--'1Vhat fire is in my ears 2' Herrick alludes to the ear super- stition— • "One ear tinglei ; some therelio.., That are'snarnue now at me," - An earlier writer (1598) says— ' If their ears tingle they sax,. it is a sign they have some enemies abroad that do or are about to speak evil of them.' An old writer says of the super- stitious man-aaWhen his right ear tingles he -will be cheerful, but if his left he will be sad.' In popular weather lore, when the ears ring at night a change of wind is at hand. Torster, an old meteorologist, says—'Singing in the ear portends a change of weather.' . Q A:AO 440.137A QU'n to be twice as durable. Mr la Rathbun, Desoronto, attended Methodist tosmeeting, and finding a debt of $2,000 on a newly completed church, offered on behalfof the Presbyterians of the vitlege $500 providing the Methodists raised a similar sum. The challenge was accepted, $832 raised, and the debtofthe edifice An Omaha boy held a small reduced to $500. Frog in his hand, an 'upon Open- During the visit of' theltsseri- lag his mouth the eau scientists ,to Cleveland many hopped in and was swallowed,and of them inspected the Garfield since then all efforts to expel it aaarlow,,,a, *....,4t.aata, "amiss from' the stomach have been in was osiatetearal Week( jeaensoliat vain. sessi- a verisalorge mapatit, tbenl de - A Cleveland brute Clashed eidedathat the tiarTarument revietv- woman's face with a razor because ed is a whole 'iaanothina but a she wouldn't matey him. He got big heap of' storiet Which t'bears a a sentence for 20 years, but now, closer resemblaace- to some old after a few months imprisonment robber 'chief's icaatie than to a a petition is going the rounds to memorial structuOS fieoure his release. On 'certain ofaties Prussian rail - Wong Chee, a San Francisco ways the experimaet is being Chinaman, purchased a drawing tried of' substitntaag paper for room ticket to Chicago a week metal in the bearing of' the axles. ago. He is the first one of his The pulp is compressed and nationality who ever committed moulded much es in the manufac- such an extravagance. The privi- Uri e of' the bodies of paper car lege of riding in a drawing -room wheels, and, after a little use, ear from San Francisco to Chicago these bearings 'become so saturat- , cost him $58 extra. His coun- ed with oil that there is necessity trymen California eensider for lessfrequen.t lubrication than him daft, with metal. Any. mineral oil may be used with them. The novel spectacle of a funer- al was witnessed in Washington recently. At the funeral of two employees of the street railway the other employees draped ar. open summer car,which was used to serve as a hearse, and this was followed by a string of ears, all draped, and occupied by the em- ployees and their friends. John A. :Robinson, a wealthy• and eccentric citizen of Norwich, Conn., died recently. His will provided that his Lady be kept three days• before being placed in the grave. It was further order- ed that the grave be so Made that an exit from it would bp easy. A hammer was to' be placed bear his' right hand, and a lamp kept burning in his grave for three days and nights. These direc- tions were carried out to a letter, but with no startling result, Louis Larsen, a workman for Crane Brothers, Chicago, on Thursday morning, crawled into an iron cylinder. used for the pis- ton of a hydraulic elevator to clean it. lie took with him a lighted candle and built a fire of benzine. In a short time the cylinder was tilled with inflammable gas. An explosion followed; and the man was enveloped in flames, which tilled the entire cylinder. The workmen were attracted to the • spot by his cries, but it was im- possible to get at hinaand enough water could not at once be pro- cured to quench the flames. His . companions therefore, were com- pelled to stand and listen to the burning man's cries until they were stilled by death. Thellors G. W. Ross, Minister of Education, has had conferred on him by St. Andrew's Univers- ity of Scotland the degree of L.L. D. The honor is bestowed in consequence of Mr Ross' eminent' services in behalf' of education in Ontario and in recognition of his position as a dietinguiehed. Cana- dian. The degree is well placed and the grounds on which it has been awarded are well stated. There is no one among our public men ofopinien moresound-' ly Canadian in sentiment, and no one whoSe speeches breathe purer enthusiasm for the, promise of greatness for Canada or who is more devotedly attached to Cana- dian institutions. Sir Charles Tupper, replying on Thursday on behalf of the Col- onies at the Cutler's banquet at Sheffield, referred to the Fisheries question. He said in regard to Mr Chamberlain that it would have been impossible for the gov- ernment, to select a man to dis- charge the duties with more abil- ity, tact or discretion, No man would have been more acceptable to the people of the States. Pas: sing to what he diecribed as the President's somewhat extraord in- ary message, Sir Charles said the majority in the.Senate were determined, in view of the elec- tion, that the President should not have the kudos of settling the question. Yet the rejected treaty that had been agreed upon try the President and the adminis- tration was fair and honorable. Without expressing an opinion on the nieSSage, he might say all Canada asked was a fair applica. ion of the principlesof the Treaty ,of 1888. The Government would never adopt a policy, fiscal or o'erwis, envoys° to the people of Britain. Canada would, c mama no indiscretion, eye!) in the face of the President's illogical mem. sage. Children Cry for Canada Presbyterian ; , When the hot weather. begins each sum- er there is a cry from many quar- ters for short sermons. Twenty minutes., it is said, is the right length for a sermon in the heated term. When the heated terns is over we never hear any cry for longer sermons.. Perhaps preach- ers IengLhen without being asked to do so. Possibly those who want twenty minutes sermons sermons during the heated term would be happy to take them all the year round. Ono thing is certain—nobody says the weather is now cool, let us have longer sermons. . s The owner of some horning pigeons at Hamm, bet. that on a fine day twelve of his bees would beat a like number. of carrier pig- eons in. making rthe distance, one hour, .betweam Minns and the town of Rhynern. Twelve pigeons and twelve bees,.four drones and eight working bees, were taken to Rhyean, and simultaneously set free. A white drone arrived home four seconds in advance of the first pigeon; the remaining three drones and thn second pig- eon arrived together', and the eight wog icing bees preceded the. ten pigeons by a length. • Mrs Grayburn, widow of Capt. Gsayburn, of Ottawa, has entered an action for $20,000 for breach of promise of smarriage against Rev Marc Ami, pastor of the French Protestant Church in that city. The marriage was to have occurred at SaBartholomeW Church,New Edinburg, The bride and bridesmaids were in waiting at the appointed hour, but the bridegroom failed to put in an appearaace,having left that afters - noon too sail for France.. Mr Ami's friends say that he -sailed fol.-Dlr.' cope Wednesday afternoon, where he will spend. the winter with his friends. The affair has caused a 'sensation. " A scientific sharp declares that the constant jar of walking on the city pavements can be largely prevented 1)3 imitating nature. 'The human heel is covered with an elastic pad. Now, as to walk barefoot would be out of th question, it is suggested that we replace the hard boot -heel with one made of elastic rubber. It -would cost but a few cents a month in repair, and would have the ad- ditional advantage of lessening the noise or hurrying feet, and preventing to an extent, broken bones in winter. A London physician, writing of the peculiar effects- of certain professions on the health, advises clerks to discard the high stool so commonly used by book-keepers and accountants. He regards it as far more healthful in every way to stand when working at a desk. If need be the clerk may rest a few minutes by sitting down in an ordinary chair but to work ail day in a cramped' position neces- sitated by the high stool is ruin- ous to the health, and must, soon- er or later, result in the breaking down of the individual who does it. • If you have the bronchitis, you are hoarse, Your throat's raw and smarting: you're hacking of course And if you're not careful, the first thing you know, Your lungs are attacked, and discs ,c lays you low. By using Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, bronchial affections and all kindred complaints can be cured, but if neglected, they often terminate into consumption, Pitcher's Castoria. Chas. Rowan, while digging a post -hole on his farm in Illinois the other day, struck a pint bottle of whiskey 27, year's old, as shown It seems formerly to have been by date figures blown on the' a form of endearment to bite one's glass. Charles took a seat in a ear. We read in Tomeo and shady corner of the' fence and Juliet'— opened, his find, and when; his will bite thee by thine ear wife came there to look for him for that jest.' he couldn't tell a post -hole from The ear was in Egypt a heiro-• a hole in the sky,. glyph of' obedience. The saying 'wall have ears,' is very old. Chaucer says that"The holdf bath eyen and the wood bath ears,' Thephrase 'to set people ly the ears had its origin in a pot-hOtse custom of stringing pots by the handles or ears,and clashing them together in carrying them. Although prohibitory laws have been enacted by Congress for Alaska, still there is a great deal of drunkenness in the coun- try, and a very low state of mole ala generally. Mrs J. A. Acker - maim writes from Sitka that she has been holding night temper- ance meetings in the afternoons The Scotch ask—Tight lug, everywhere among the native left lug, which lug lows.' So in children and the whites. The Hull, England, it is said that Governor's wife gave groat assis- slander' is talked about, you if the tante in this work,- and as a re- left ear burns. but if' the right, salt two unions were formed, one men speak well of you, In Lan - amongst the whites and one chashire this is reversed. The amongst the 'natives. • Loyal Lea- Dutch say that some one is prais- ions have also been organize% ing you it' the right ear itches,but •among the native 'and Russian if the left he calls you names. children, all of whom have been In the latter ease bite your. little given to the use of tobacco, finger and the evil speaker's longue will suffer aceordingly. In thie. country it is said that people talk well of you if the right , car tingles, but evil if the left. THE FATTEST IN THE WORLD. 'be C. S. Elliott, of Toronto,Who has spent so much time and thought upon inebriety, has lust contributed an article to tine Journal of inebriety, Hartford, Conn, It gives the characteristics of dipsomania, and describes the two principal farms in which the disease appears—the periodic and the chronic. After dealing with these lie says—qt, is a subject worthy the attention of our- .best and wisest men, one by which economy is effected and reform promoted by the same act. Taxes are lessened, revenue increased, society benefitted and homes made happy. Could other principles be so worthy the attention and - action of our municiple and legis- lative assemblies—to 'wipe out - the stigma and disgrace of Can- ada being so far behind almost every. civilized country on the face of the earth in making suit-, able provision foe tire care and treatment of t his su tiering' class:. ...From a health standpoint, from a moral standpoint, and from a financial standpoint, all other questions in politics become in comparison of trivial importance. That such a rich blessing is in store for the near future is appar- ert to any one who 'has felt the popular pulse. Politics in. which a question having such an im mense bearing upon health is a dominant issue, is worthy of the attention i of every physician. There probably was never a time when the medical profession had such an opportunity to use their influence in politics for good. We are happy to note that 95 per cent of the physicians we have met during the last CO days expressed themselves unqualified lyin favor of the prohibition of the liquor traa tie, and will use their influenesto that end, The influence of our 10,000 professional readers used in 'the right direction would further the cause of Prohibition by 100,000 votes. ---i The people's Health Journal. Be on I' auk Guard. Don't allow a cold in the head to "lowly and surely run into Catarrh, when you can be cured for 25c, by using Dr Chase's Ca- tarrh Cure, A few applications cure a• sipient catarrh ; 1 to 2 boxes cure ordinary catarrh ; 2 to 5 boxes are guaranteed to cure chronic catnrih. Try it. Only 23c, and sure cure, Sold by all druggists. A telegram from St.Justin,Quc. says:—The farmers in this v icinity are verydisheartened since the last gale which has caused losses that will aggregate about $60,000. The cheese factories are not now receiving half the quantity of milk that they did this time year ago, which can -only be at- trilitit041 to poor pasturage. Farm- ers are l'egimaing to sell their cattle an i buying their winter's provisions. The crops nre really iii it worth ha rvestinsa Winnie J.thitstoti, th 1:t colored woman in this country, weighing 849 pounds, died at Baltimore on Thursday, at -a boarding houee,the door of' which had been especially enlarged for She was called 'Big her benefit. Winnie,' and she had been exhib- iting as the fattest woman in tine world for the last ten years.:Fatty degeneration of the heart caused her death, She was:horn in- Ken - tucky,and as a child gave ao signs of attaining any unusual size. At the early age:of 15, she married a man of her own Pace by the name. of Johnson. When she was about 20 years of age she began to grow -large, and as every year added to her age so it did to her size. She 'Was the Mother of 10, five sons and five daughters.. She always travelled in a baggage car fitted Up for her accomoclation, as she could not pass through the 'door of an ordinary•car, The coffin was five' feet eleven inches in length, three feet eight inches in width, ancj three feet two inches deep. Seven Men had plenty of room to stand in it. The room which the woman died, is in the rear of a store, the show window had to be removed so that the huge coffin, and its weighty con- tents could be hoisted through by a derrick. The fourteen strong men who acted es pall -bearers had all they could do to shove the dead giantess inte her final rest- ing place. — • an extraordinary ease of leng- thy insensibility! resulting from fright, has just oecurred in13rant- ford. Sonic one fur a practical joke oh Monday morning fired off a toy pistol through the skylight of the kitchen in ` the American hotel, and the reports so frightened one of the girls—Annie Clarkethat she immediately fell to the fluor in what was at first supposed to be merely a fainting fit, The ora dinary restoratives failing to restore consciousncess a doctor was sent for, but be also failed to revive the patient, who was then taken to thasbospital, where the girl returned to partial sensibility during the afternoon. When Baby wan Slot, we gave her Castoria, When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Miss, she citing to Castoria, When she had Children,ahe gave them Castorie • a o, N.Y. For personal reasons, the author prefers not to have his name published broad -cast, and it is in defe- rence to his,vrishes that it is omitted.1 n g g • with the object of exporting Lum- , rnbearia.knodt.the timber to theEuropean We know of no mode of treatment which offers, to sufferers front cbrohie r diseases, a more certain hope of cure ' than that which is comprehended inthe , use of Ayrc'd Sarsaparilla. Fu a:purifying t and invigorating the blood, this preparly ation is unequaled. A woman of Dover, Me., bought a barrel of flour which was not of • her favorite brand, though highly recommended by the grocers Of' course it dido't please her,and she told the (Proem. how heavy, coarse, black, sticky, and generally abom- inable it was. Ho said that he'd take it back and get her the 'kind she wanted. lie carted the bar- rel to his store, took out the head, replaced it with a head bearing the desired brand, and sent the barrel back. Then the flour was all right, and the woman con- firmed a• her good opinion of her ju gment. Ayre's Ague Cure acts directly on the liver and billiary apparatus, and drives out the malarial poison which induces liver, complaints and bilious disorders. Warranted to cure or money refunded. A number of' Buffalo men, and three roronto parties, have form- ed to buy 20,000 acres of timber lande iri the State of' Mississippi, Eureka Bakery ! Opposi te. tris Post Office. The stqoseriber desires to thank the ' mdc of or their very liberal patrou- age in the past, and at, the same time he would intimate to them that he has removed to the wore convenient stand in Smith's Block, dt-ectly opposite the Poet Office whore he will be pleased to supply them with Bread, Cakes, etc., of flret class quality. WEDDING CAKES A SPECIALTY and prepared in splendid style. J. A. ICING, I3aker. E WCOMBE 1. PIANOFORTES T. Elegant hi Design. •SoLd in Construclion. Excellent in Tone. 1Pnrodiaonuandcae.dabnyd equal to be the finest made instruments, at (treletoeutleyeabeeesLU, ingitidieStaatpes) Perct. less Expense Ilefore purchasing eintirtinnicate with the Manufacturers OOTAVIUS NEWCOMBE & -CO. (di in -ti Street, Toronto. ••*--- - - NEW PAINT SHOP. KA is ER&W ILSON. Desire to announce that they have opened a shop on Albert Street; Clinton, next to Glas- gow s store. Doing practical 'workmen they believe they can give satisfaction to all who entrust them work, PAPER HANDING, KAT: SOMINING, PAINTING, GRAINING, AND CEILING DEcORATIONS, &O., executed on the shortest notice. Orders respectfully solicited, • • Dr. Chase world -while reputation as a physician and author. His Mandrake Omtletion Liver Ctire is triumph of medical skill, curing all diseases v. the kid ay and Idler. Symptoms of KIDNEY COM Pl. A INV. Distressing aches and pains in the back; a Still pain or weight in the bladder and base of the abdomen; scalding urine often obstrileted; frequent desire to urinate, especially at night, among aged per- sons; hot, stry Oda, pale complexion, red and white deposits, il rdizzi Tiess,sour stems 'di patio'', piles, liver siral swellings, &r. SYMPTOMS or raven enseteaarier. Pain tinder the shoulder blaileS. Jaundice, sallow efnhi)jeolon. a weary, tired feeling, no life or energy, heinlaehe dyvepda, Indigestion, spots, pimples, Sze. 110W SAM LO. Mandrake and Dandelion are nature'o Li ver cures and when combined with Kidney remedies, as In Dr. Chase's Liver Cure, will most imsitively cure all Rid ney.f.ivar troubles. It acts like a charm, stimulating the clogged liver, strengthening the kidneys, and invigorating the sande body. Sold by all dealers IASI, with Receipt 13ook, which a lone Is worth the money. KIDNEY LIVER PILLS. Dr, Chase's P1ll arethe only Kidhey-LIver Pills made. May be taken_during any employment. They cure kidney -Liver troubles,headache, billiousness, coRtivenesR, &a. One Pill a da4, said by all dealers:, Prise 25 cents. 'I'. Fl unit:NINON & kfatinfacturom firailford, Ontario. Foj sale by Worthington and Combe tIl C) rh z 1:14. 0 t7i z CD 1-3 CD