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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1893-11-30, Page 64- - r POULTRY CONVENIENCES. • C.atre.sacs For Fssdlag Gras.-Prw- test/ad the Fend sad Water. A correspondent of the Farm Journal, who was lowing much grain by rats and chipmunks, eowtrived all automatic pout- _ try feeder for grain which prevents waste by wire, also by fouling, err. He E RIAL ")%, When it was ready for use, I taught BAKING my flock to writ in one minute by plac- POWDER tug a dish of corn on the platform when PUREST, STRONGEST, BEST. 1 THE IM :..,:�._. A. -.:. Am,. m. ... Loma. P1... . s:cs, or so, tabesitlM II. W. Olt I ITT. Toronto. OIs. CRISP AND CASUAL Visaed'.I.1i1 1.t. tt.aaaaert aa'. Mead. Liverpool has tie largest load debt ut any town in Euroio. Men v Norway .otic..: vote .mlees they have bew raocin..ted. la ladit 11.. •:. is abot:-. ne missionary • o e. ery 590,(0 . people. Twomey -five ..teulan.i i.orsee are used .a the ("say* trade t1 hoodoo New fork claims to be the only ',tate teat produces both rock sad brio salt. din htadred tats we -e oa exhibit•on at the recent o re-•& Palace at show :n ' on. don "'as Cared Mates has a lower percentage .ind an ogle than y other country the world. 1' .rnfnl barns, bruises, .caI is and.uts ars eqfu..kly so.tiord sad heiesi by '. adores l's•bohe Salve I r single arose has been found on the *vast of Florida wit.: a circulator/nice .. 5 feet b indim It issue to eat Freers:in Worm I'ow den, a, they act e.ly or. the worms and Ido not injure the chill. Franc, is the only F.::ropean country •b •u Las talky fewer able tadied men Than it had 36 years ago. Fick headache noosed by .\cess of We or a diseedeeed stomach it promptly relieved be using Nattocai Pella lm ... China gold and silver are mewl • com modities, whose price u rem:la:ed by the hes et .nuply and dema.3 Lord mayors of Loadois Lave collected, daring tb. past 2v yuan. • little over 35C. 000.000 for charitable purposes Han k Hamlin .s a tiro. wiring business it. Ha -:le. Ky , And one can get anything from • hammer to a han.t:.ock there. to laws of ('Lala .suet getting out of temper is public u an oneewe, the punish- t..ent f..r it be•.L0 5.. days' imprison - meet. The tear, its of Londonderry is the owner of the et.alloit pony kt...wn. It weighs volt 1, pot:nds and at i:. `..rth was but 16'. i '.es hig..- to the Henry u,ocatains,n southern&'tab, i. a mound covered wi:i: grant crystals. Perfect prises of ;retinae hve cert long are .thud there. 1'altndr.tgls, w cede or sentences which spell or reedtile site backward as forward, to superstitious ages were supposed to pos- sess rnagia: Paine, !n same of the hotels of Lucltaow and ('awipro re, ta•.ch free -mated by foreign trace,then are segos which read : • lease dd not etnke the servants.' Mr. deed'• Somas P1..-lsHap •r. Wooele Norway Pine Syrup tures ,ughs, cods, bethp a. btc::chits, htarseam, soup. sed all diseases r? the throat and 1 coos. !'rice 1:5a. and ax-., at all drtgtrtiats.2 OW fella Frost Sow. Tillie--BerneIn the iron' rank of the chores is dress:filly 'harden m) eyes. Ball Ti,e gLre of the tcotligbts, i sup- rTiUis No, tire glare of the baldheada. A Preempt Care. 4 r ENTLEMI•.-Haying suffered oyer two years with co•stip•uoo, and the doctors cot toying helped me. 1 concluded to try R. ' le, rad b. f re I c ora .ne b ottle I was cured 1 -'an also retoseme•d it for sick he dacha. FruEr U. H vote Lakeview, Out. 2 espy TMee. former frond. who met Robert Lowe, a':trwarda 'iscoeatSherbrooke, to hoodoo, it s.id to have accosted him with the re - Ir -ark : ' • lion t you remember me ` i used to know you as Aoatra:,a," sad to have met with the rebuff, b es, and when I meet you again :n Matruh. i shall be happy t'- know you Pre. ernes *Obsess. '1 he mot prevalent con.pkainta at this wawa .re rheumatism, neuralgia, sore throat, mnammations and (ogestion.. For all thea sad other painful troubles Haw y.rd's Yellow (Al u the Leet internal aodez- tora.l remedy. 2 T. be t..arelemeed. •• What makes you l..,k so unhappy ' '• Teethed*. •• Allow we to congratulate you." ' A t1; who can still have tooth- •ete is .nit to be coogratulat.d."- Ilieg•ade Rieetter. wen as.pted. The elective action no the glaadular mese .ad the blood, and the general re- gulating topic sad purifyingaction of R R. R. especially adapt it ns the hilioo.. ae-ro.., ese.live w scrofulous. From three to az bottles will run- all blood diorama from s rommoo pimple to the worst sorts pubis sore. tb Toe blew Piverem„ " Are yon still taking penalise isea.sa, Sterne " ICI : 1 left og yt•terd.y. 1 don't like wy teacher 't Why net',' •• He �e.veh • dim,rne.hle way of talk- ing. He told no that if 1 kept w for anew. time I aright le able to whitewash a fewer. ' ilietemqpeits Time. a Meer tads. A hay seemed Nn T (' V Hnmshries, itsag i• Kew., (pat , who sand es(y two bottle. a 1k bur's Kelsey ..d Livor C'w.e has terwarded • Ka,sessat ea t,,e efiest filet it eserpletely eared her e1 is ileseasetery eM.wati.... kid....ass aver troubles, gosh • omtpti.asl•e .f disease. yieldl.g es=irldly r this eereiy Assad �e.sa! !sial. ArToft.tTTC P01 I.TRI FEEDP]t. they had been fasting until 9 a. in.. atter calling the flock to me and scattering a alight quantity at my feet. Tbeend v iew shows dotted linea, which are to indicate the hopper arrangement irside. A board .1 the rear running lengthwise. on e.lge, conducts the grain to the trough. That on front side le ,vee a space of one inch at the bottom. the whole length of hopper to allow grain tt. parr thrungh to thr trongh from which the fowls' feral. The do -r in trent i. made 40 swing on easy Lenges. and *lc platform 1. pivoted at B and ,balance -1 by weight. en the anus at A, so that even n small fowl .tanelieg on the piat- fonu will open the elixir by means of 11, lever 1 - lever ( and disclose the grain. The boo aro of old steel time, bent to proper shape and bolted to bottom with quarter inch bolts. I have had one in use for three years, and would not le without it. Ht the same journal attention is called to the fact that old wire and two hoop, held apart by three sticks can 1.e nada to play all -important part Rs a p,rot.rtot to the hen's feed or drink dish. The *no to fastened firmly /mss hoop and A Fs• .0 Pat •T£• T.'L then strnng over the other and back all around, making a close, vertical fent.. through which the /owls putt their bends. A larrel head cleated and nailed over he to.p twerp perfects the arrsugetuent, keeping :.11 dirt out of the top, Bose Fertilisers. The fine raw lone contains 3 or more per ceut of bitr.gen. "Dissolved bone" usually u.eaus boogie black acted upon by acids. The lone black i., bone charcoal pry/parent ranch like wood charcoal. and of croursr the heating drives of the ni- trogen. Very few raw bones are treat- ed with acids for comnhercial fertilizers. A portion of the nitrogen is lost by such treatment, and the fine lone floor is more et„norical for the fernier, Saye The Rural Pew Yorker. The finer the bone the better. The stations in ana- lyzing bone divide it into four degrees of fineness -fine, fine nteiiam, medium and coarse. In the fine nitrogen is fig- ured at 15 cents a pound and phosphoric ortc acid at 7 cents. In the coar.e grade the valnra are :; and 3 respectively, and the difference is dear entirely to fine grind- ing. BM Covering For Oyer Framers. A beekeeper writing in The American Bee Journal, lays: In lots years I have abort come to the conclusion that any- thing which will make the top of the hive airtight is all right. Enameled cloth or wooden covers made tight with bee glne during warm weather and left on undisturbed through the winter have given good results. Hume will tell yon that tight coven will be death to the bees, and others just as empathic that tbeporous centering will kill them. What would be the very beet covering for win- ter would depend upon what condition the bees wen in, when to be wintered, etc. - — --- Barley For Feeding P.rr.aea. Professor Henry says that dark col- ored barley which has been discolored by rain is jest as good for feeding pur- pose* as file bright colored leo long as it is not musky. Moreover, barley- at 2.1 to 3U cents a bushel is a cheaper feed than helm at 314 a ton. For dairy cows be recommends a mixture of olio -third bran with two-thirds ground wheat or barley. This he regards as well nigh a perfect grain ration for tench cows. For pig feeding Ire wonld add bran or aborta. Cornmeal and barley heal mined is also A good pig feed. He nays,"Barley is this great pig fattenInpp food of England.” Tt.. Mato sesi. 11 has been definitely settled at the Vermont station that the potato oath is conned by a fnngna growing on the po- tato tuber. The scab is found to la in- creased when welly potato= are need for Bleed: when barnyard mannrr is need from stork to which webby potatoes bare been fed: when the pntatose are planted on the earner land v..i' deer year. rre. germs ..1 the dh.s.es tale be killed by es ahinw the seed wr at es iba an hone and a half in a aviation of nes part 04 '.rvosno ewhliaaata dtewtved la a those genote,. M etie M •. mei puniest water. INSTRUCTIVE TOMATO TEST& Oeadr. 1.d to Oasis Yet NUM M a T. amass Agreestia/al tarevima.ewaailea. From the station of the University of Treaties** at Knoxville has base based a detailed report of some eery interetst- iug experitarots with tomatoes. grow: both in gerbil l and field. Tbrn is mock in this report that is of widespread in- tercet. ntercet. Fuliowiug are some of the con- clusions drawn from the report, the length of which prevents its being re produced in full: Cutting Lack the leadlug shoots at in tervaIl during the growing seamen de enraged the yield. Training to one or two stems hasten* maturity and secures fruit of sup.riot size aril quality. It is doubtful whether supports can be p refitably used, except in traluing tt one and two stems. Stakes and win were meet satisfactory. Strong, stocky tomato plauts should be set in the field as soon as the weather will permit. They ripen earlier and produce better. Insertiu` plants at medium depths gave Lotter re.nits than very deep or eery shallow Pet taw. The a pplica t ern of manure liquor /lade nu a'gaeeiable difference to yield. The practice of towing wed to hills, wittiuut transplanting, eb.ruld not be revonnnlend.l. fine transplanting to fiats proved wee. noted:1.1..10 than two trau.ploutiuos. Seettliuxs mistimed slightly better by weight than cuttings, but individual (rent% ou cutting* veer• very much the larger. Cutting back to three ir.ches of the ground at time or trt:usplauttIIg tie - creased the yield. Bagging improved the color and qual- ity of fruit and ,Ie v teed the loss by rot and suu bheteriug. Value of system iu ;o-.a•tice depend:. upon the coot. Varieties tleat made the bent •bowing Ile. past . seg' ou we* Early- Paragon, 'ilug llnnthrll. 1)wart Champion. l'ar- (heal, 1.ie uigston's Beaute. Lorillard, 1.•r;y AI we, i.irii..1- w.'s Fa vont... Vol- nnt• er and Yellow Pi nu. T ;i. Meet Wheat. An ei.:, rprising (alio farm. r say i that hr tied • that his beet wheat, where tin: plant • sir. W r,.tydtil bO as to produce the 'argent* y ie•ld, dors not produce as Targe and plump a berry as wheat that grows more thinly and yields hes. He be- lieves the yi.4.1 is largely determined by pedigree and kept 011 srlertin4 Wed from the best pans of hie tk•i.i with steadily increa:Ong yields. The idea is well worth thinking about. Potwibly ont reason why Mr. Terry's wheat yields grow better is-becanse he is constantly making his land rieber. The fact is trete, too. of conn if not of wheat. ICulxxdt would think of selecting seed corn from the half filled ears that set too late tt fertilize all tete bilk, though the kernels on Omit ear- are often twice am large so on earn we11 filled. But with othei grains -mit. and barley-, for examples -- the leruest, plumpest grain is best for seed. fats that grow thinly and pro duce poorly are light weight, because most of them are affected by rust. which pr.•veut" dcv 1.1.m•nt of the grain. A silo i.sbetltiste. A German farmer's method of feeding turnips or luang.ld,• i- suggested to our own fanners who are not i.rovidel with silos, by The Rural New Yorker. He fel his roots in a box with three e<mr pertinent''. 1n which the tows feed war eoakel several (lays previous to feeling. The box is built out of pine scantlings and 1 b inch boards, with the top and front open, the whole divided into three equal compartments. each to bold an en- tire day's feed for all animals, space be- ing calculate) on the basis of two cubic feet for each cow. A three inch layer of chopped hay and straw ms now spread crenly on the floor of the first compartment: then follows a thin layer of sliced tuaug. hls, which SUBSTITUTE 1011 A SILO. have preciously been mixed with the daily allowance of oilrwal and bran; then another layer et chopped hay and straw, treading down firm as it grows np and setting in the front boards as needed. When full, a board covering is put on. On the secon1 day the next compartment is 'similarly filled. and on the third day the last one. On the third day he begins to feel from the fine com- partment. This has now become thor- oughly heated and has entered into a sweet fennentation, giving an agrorahl• calor to the whole wietnre. and the avid- ity with which it is consumed proves that it is relished. Ileum 1. Cabbies* Culture. At the Maine station it is reported that trimming off a portion of the leaves of cabbage planta at the time of trans- planting gore nncertatn results. Planta handled in pots before setting out in the field were earlier and better than these grown in boxes. Nonesuch, a oew va- riety. did well on the station grounds two years in suee..warm Seeds from Long Island and Washington state gays abont the same results. Oa tM O•..ery Mod. Take gond care of yonv hamate... Am oreawioeal cleaning and oiling will stop one leak on the fano Hee to it that the meritorious pallets have all the food required to snake. golden return in eg;fa. Resor :,,bier that paint and oil are ex- cellent preeervet.ree of timber and metal, which mimes look after the farm imple- ments. A few pooltry keepers have ssooeadea fee a short time with pro iieeso s B.ehm of taro or three hundred &deli birds• lot sea nal. the plan Goes sot work well. C1 FEEDING FOOOER. V lmpeoved PIs. Teat may no Adopted With Snood sap.... Throwing the bundles upon the ground for the cattle to trample under foot while the feeder is deetending the steps or coming around the back way is 'be ordinary method of feeling fodder from the two story or the "bank" barn. Those who have been pursuing this plan will greatly appreciate the impruvrtueut rep- resented iu the following cut. which was originally drawn for Tb. Rural New Yorker and thus described in that jour- nal.. ournal: The cost of this arrangement le com- paratively small and within the reach of all. A platform 12 to 14 feet long and as wide as the small double doors -7 feet or more -is hung to the rear 04 the barn. Out upon this the fodder is carried and dropped into a feeding rack placed on the ground just below. The side beams of thin hanging platform are utatle of Light wood, pine or poplar, 3 inches Ly b iuches, connected below by four ercwapieues of stouter material, 3 inches by 4 inches, all firmly bolted to- gether. Botnts nailed down upon these crosspieces funn the floor. A bolt hav- ing a hook &bore Le inserted near the outer end of each side beam of the plat- 30 YEAR.) rXPPRIEIICr. Tobacco is one of t /ticks of manufact- ure anuf act- ure whose real _t can one be only ou by actual use For thirty years we have been ma- QinQ' the pest Passes o to- Jacco.. and we recommend MASTIFF PLUG.CUT as a reliable and .superior article. XMAS,_MERRY XMAS 1 J. P. PACE Tobsoco Ca, Rioheao•d, .ad Montreal, Cis REMEMBER • .i lthlii itriumph La rmmptoinesille Oemplaint i yea p• 1dIoa� W veamti :':spasm, ager 3pariah MEMBRAY'S, Fos I'Ei-p1Jo COES ro1DEJt. form, and in each doorpost, about four feet from the floor, a sinsiier booked I..lt is placed, upon which are hung the brace rods, made of five-eighths inch round iron furuished witha ring at each end. Through the sill, just back of each door post, two half inch holes are Loved an.l an irun lop (Cr inserted, having an inside measure slightly greater than 3 inches in width and extending half a foot or more below the snrface. These receive and hold the beans at the back end of the platform. To prertnt strain- ing theee loops by any horizontal thrust a board (B) is placed just behind them, against which the ends of the beams may rest. This board is supported by others (AA)naikvl against the sleepers in the position shown in the drawing. When the season's feeding is done. the platform is taken down and stowed away until agaiu.needed. The feed rack is placed just below the miter fond of the platform and parallel with the bent. Is this position it may 1.e 16 feet hog and yet easily r -ache.! [row the platform. Ordinary fencing bearde an4 scantling are used in its construction. Caritas B*alphlds For Hes Lies. A new nee for the bisulphide of carbon ban Leen pointed out by Dr. Schneider In the Journal de ('Agriculture. or. Schneider recommends tying a few email bottles of bienlphide of carbon to the perches in the henhouse, the bottles being nestoppered and the liquid allowed to evaporate. The hens roost over the bottles. sod the vapor of the bisulphide kills the lice. The recommendation is founded upon careful exp.erimeut, as the following extract will show: ''The very next day after using it 1 was agreeably surprised to find that the enemy had left, leaving none but dead and dying behind, and on tio following day not a single living insect was to be found, while my birds were sitting quietly on the roosts enjoying an un- wontedly peaceful repose. This lasted for 12 days, till the sulphide hid evap- orated. Twenty-four boors later a freab invasion of lice had put in an appearance ander the wings of the birds in the warm- est portions of the house, where then were no currents of air. I replenished the supply of sulphide and the next morn- ing only a few of these were relnainenwg• "The next morning every trace of ver- min had disappeared. Since that time i have personally made a great number of further trials with the enlphlde with immediate and absolute success. I should recommend the sulphide of carbon to he put in small medicine vials hong about the pigeon hoose or immIllry roost. When it las about three parts evaporated, the remainder will have acquired a yellow- ish tinge and no longer acts so complete- ly as before, but if it be shaken np afresh it will suffice to keep the enemy .t a distance." B.oplag Miami In a Cold Climate. A Wisconsin correspondent of Ohio Farmer describes a plan of wintering carious which he considers perfect. H. save: We select a piece of dry ground and dig a trench from four to six feet wider and long enough to hold .11 that we have t9 put in it. We pot them about .ix inches deep in the pit. They are pat npom the ground, hat about two inch*e of straw over them anti thee . few inches of earth on the straw. We wish than t0 get froren aa boos as possible after they are put in the pit. After we are certain that they anal] foremen we haul some loaners and cover therm, perhaps a foot deeper than at first. There are two reasons for this. One is that if they are allowed to thaw during the winter they will rot and tb. entire lot b. list Upon the other band. if they get trews too hard, they will either rot when they thaw oat or el.e be dead and worthless for seta in the spring, atter the frost is all out of them. we take them Peet of the pit and put theta tack spas the shelves again as they were daring the fall before. /losers they ramie mall duly are seeded to net eat 1 ban tried vitriol!. pleass of pew serving sake *Ma thxoagb the ertaIn,, bete . st tbss icet oat preyed .a satfw• fines M jsgIsietery as UM stems. �taskt, , "` v+4aA1/110xur, •. art- ere.* sae=.• �� �» KIDNEY AND sr immediate reliefeadortaeraetere. at ail Dow boors. ■scows, ■elleter Ceimpatgy of reterber.eaf, oummi.s , PETERBOROUGH, . . ONT. LIVER CURE Ye( tale by 0 A. Milt. 1b.aglat. Ydwtsb. Oat Patronise True Competition. TR: CAxaoesx P.cirtc RAILWAY Co',. Tau•aere has been estaML6ed to give the public • eretcl•ss service with lair sad per manent competition. It i• menaced on bootees prisedpies and 1• tea 'merest of its patrons. It deserves the support of every torsos who believes in oompetit For owlet despatch use Ibis Ceesp n7 Ilse.. co.aecti•g with •11 hues sad eaYtllo.. Is ranted atuee, Caied. and Meape. Direct throne► wires to all pinta In North wan. Hritl.b Columbia rued Prune Cowl Oalce-loath Hide We•t-t. I.:1zAICYFf=. )V u Leval Ma.•aor. Ood.Neb A GREAT OFFER! t: RE.I T /'.IPERS —aan— aREAT i'RIEMIf MS. We are to a position to offer TM Mama and the Fsmtl, Braid sod Worldly War, of Mewtra.l fur ass year for ALIO. Tide eat" en- titles t be tier too choice of two strost premiums vea by tbe publishers of the Iroise. a1 ; N..t for These p e iame ars Ms •• Sear u took of t3a or it preferred • eopy of the great Mussily a.e.Id a•.vo.Ir Picture. whist retells at twisty doWra The premiums -Almanac sad Mims-wfl as ready about the sad of Nov- e.b.r. a d will M forwarded in the order V =tthe pcescripeioas are resolved. ons ees I the taper may Beale at rico. Ruin. ber Ms offer of • cho(ee of pr entionsit MID goad to .sop* who subscribe dott•a the • th e, Afterwards e choice wtE istaasely le withdrawn. 11-11 SUBSCRIBE FOR Canada's Best Family Paper THE HAMILTON Weekly Spectator ENLARGED Aso IMPROVED. agneas:: all tams Moa Naar hest a es..e.. e se mil r t.Md re.....ea.. FM 1M•1 Mosw.wlesag blesses. TM passes- Idite.ry Iaasser. therysaimi ser twee,awb. $1 TO IST JANUABY $ I tHOB arra 5. _Meer frown realise e now t tillwefM8January. TIALiaNO TAR Jt 00 ROVNfi" -and our M only p .k Apatta ��aated w. t��eaYsewt r wurai .s't • ilei woa WaaYd tt'11js hi.."t� 'M Par Moms NMI sastM•enaalarms Womanise. Onosei. THE CREME DE LA CREME OF CHRISTA uoonB TO SEE THEM IS TO BUY THEM. SHOWN BY Fraser & Porter Ouly RAPHAEL TUCK, PEAK: and $TO 11' ART GOODS, LEATHER and SILK BINDINGS N PRESENTATION VOLUMES. GENTS' and LADIES' TRAVELLING OASES,, FANCY O..INA and STERLING SILVER NOVELTIES. —$—N—N— December MetatOolita,! Fashion Sheet Fr, FRA ZER & PORTER, Maaalers Irl( TrIrpMae Ce. Booksellers and Stationers. Goole's Beatemall Stove Pipe Varnish Lame Ober. Mast Lasers, Quickest !keying. Use it once suet you t .e no .Roar Climax Furniture Polish, Brightens up all varnished f.raiture. Very Ia.ur- Standard Sarsaparilla, A fine thing for the blood se * purifier and tee FREEMAN'S TASTELESS CASTOR OIL. LIGHTNING SOAP FOR REMOVING SPOTS ON CLOTHES. OUR STOMACH RIO LIVER PILLS ARE FINE. FREE SAMPLE. W. C. GOODE, - Chemist. SafetyBlcyoles FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN WK ARE OL TSI LLINU ALL COMPIITITUR$ . PNEUMATIC TIRES, from $50.00 CUSHION TIRES, •' 20.00 Ol'R COMP MORS ARE SIMPLY 1!10T Of 1T VOA QUALITY OR PRP A. G OSHEN CARPET SWEEPERS, th' ...t tr. Mehl Ni RUM. LAWN MOWERS. This roan maws I. poel..eiea. GARDEN TOOLS AND HOSE. our Hao is ample, R. P. WILKINSON. NODOUBT YOU ARE VERY MUCH ALIVE t TO YOUR INTERESTS. 'IHAT IS WHY YOU BUY YOUR BOOTS and SHOES E. DOWNING, Where you will get goal, hoe..t gs•tis, sad everything warranted to be as reprwaMsi We have a larger deck .ad tlhsm alp the ether shoe deal* r town combined. W keep the meet g'aty 'i s18M.Ms goods task io Curds. Paces are Lower than the Limn, ad nl k kept tide. E. DOWNING. N. B. -Loather sad Fi.dimp m any quantity .t lowest puss. Keep your eye ON NAIRN'S SHOV .WINDOWS FOR THE NEXT MONTH AND YOU WILL FIND IT WILL PAY U N D ERTAi(ERS. s_ 111:t013"WE 4' ac BOW Have added to their present briar roe el B. J. lfai's Itsttrm of Otty Hews , also •he Beed lime of f.a.rel ittit f.htltlpp r *II mad are now propaeed te eoedeet hiserels at piioes ressooliblo This depertowt will he strictly attended to by hie esu Wdllfan. WM ie theoil the late D. Gordon Mr the pest US W a kmowledga ta. heehaws, and by preempt attendee hepar be owe pliNt1 pobhio petromeg. Rmember the pl.oe>`Wwee(A., ea paw way Me tk• r- oam Oft' ofAosa J. BROPHEY & SON. Wt SI Uel: Lin( JI DRJ 1 FI 50c PER PRAY S. Ibe M /,3.n T. P, Ikrrom� 1 qe 5101 • ie iahi o;uptete iben are House, an urh•al take. t Weds!! -reed to w1 ku taigiag fr ares : be n of is orusI is rarely, Asa a tee mar. A. t.ay be t 'xh anti ara laplaia bacon l•'i sap an it die parse `pe•ker's yin. • I ' Prayer The m writes hit tutu it tack of Gat par 9. sexy 1 castled t riled an; daring t Aosta of sae sett Ike front 'p eaker'i lad on tI salting Wady °pi Beach, • previous There stood, to stators e.rst, th always Py. taken, sties etc go a cls Maher week M onion The sea-, nett le this th win sod the wet M1� •.apse tkwgk lab ete every -Ikat eel Ib M pt.l tk1 n1 Mos of Nan huh sl p.p how* bee 1 hell„ it 18 yl