Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1896-10-15, Page 2t r 7 THZ,;i1:! t:o()rflfcH. ov'r.. THURSDAY. OCT. (5, 18.4. UTTER LAUGH. St curl s.l like boa' We SsMet bask. iMO, wus't bring .aaeketre te yes -- Setter laugh ieat'u't c at. with trews. • light et Uty Nand.; 1* all per ape sad dowse ter felag to do, by ball. -- la est to Mask. Rheaer burde•'s bard to bail. Better grim. Oarees du'1 no good for can. Setter grim. R per teem 'at ort.•+ July delta, don't• sit same As' shish meat erp1.rZ ..,..o . Ise yeti/ PeIs the surest way to *hi pet to grin. Wien, you Woe of cusalu'. dua'll Reiter smile. Abu skeeter, bite and nada•. weal. B. iter saaa. at yer book *ad 11a. Bits slu.ik V. the limb. er .utnt bed link, Only way to slaw ler plu., k. 'Steed of grutmblla' •Ii for while. Is lot to •mile. Alfred 8111.un. in Chicago AsrsId. eue.e as models and nearly all nal been up before my husband 1n hta capacity as ma1etrate, during the put month Supposing one ud them bad noticed ul; watch ur rings duo tug • sitting? The thought was ay palling. Puotideps behind me made In) heart lump tato my mouth but the) died away in the distance. 1 shudder ed, stepped In a puddle up to m) ankles, and. had I been a man Anil nut So frightened. should undoubted!. have used bad language. "1 had reached a hollow. the ver) darkest part of the road where the foe lay thickest. when all at once 1 war conta•luus of a presence beside me. 1. was exactly as It the very mist sect taken shape and put las arm run t I my waist. The shock wee so sudde.•r. that. for an instant, I felt as If struck by • dagger. My tongue- clave to tit root of my mouth, and hoe 1 didn't faint un the stat has aies:s been ,e mystery to nee. "The spirit of the fug. or the high - A TERHIIRLI': h'1{I( HT, wayntan, kept a firm hold on me, but (tel not change the direction of my "Sow dose fright effect ou! It al- f•...tstepa When the first intense Y (right gave place to a wort of semi ways makes me cold all over. and consciousness. 1 found myself ben .,.weep, like water down ore's tack. guided In a lashlon which gave uta )..0 know."• to understand that the ghost, gyps) "Fright?" qur8Uwted one of thus • ,.r garotter, a htchever It might be., addressed. "oh, 1( 1 m frightened, I at least knew the road. 1 nu longer scream right straight out, nothing can stepped into. puddles, or scratched MY stop me- 1 Just yell." hands in the hedges, but was assisted "Tau Just dee" corroborated another along, appar.-ntly without an eRdit. of the pretty conclave round the Are. -Why 1 dui nuc cry 041 Is the Ines - with • laugh. "1 never heard say- I plleal.le thing It was doubtlwe that think Ilke it: when the• traria. we ,net f unit shock which had paralysed my yesterday In the avenue at dusk Dud- i tongue. yet 1 was being taken to sum.: Aenly addressed us, you med. the wry- lonely spot, there, I presumed, to be kin ring, and pinched m) arra black 1 robbed ur murdered, or both. by one and blur. until 1 made you understood whom I could recognise only as a the wretched creature had only asked blurred niece-, If Indeed it was of this he way. acrid at all. There was the usual desultory chat And all this while terror kept m•• and exchange of confidence*, between dump, while the thing neither re'In- mouthtula of muffin. concerning ' Kwsh.d nor tightened its grasp, so far alarms, pas. present and future. when not is rough eine. but held on the even a handsome womap with mischievous tenor of its way up the hill which un - eyes, who had not hitherto .{,uteri. less fright had sent my wits wool - exclaimed: "Nilee near of you Girt, gathering altogether, should lead, I ever struck dumb with fright?" knew, to our own •venue. "What a question?" they chorused. ` .,0 course 1 wax fully aware that "Why, Mrs. Treherne, wt -re you ever !some terrible design was in the mind taken like that?" I of my ghostly companion, and feared "Un one memorable occasion," war lest every moment should be my the reply. while a comical expression hist. 8ti1L with 111.' there wan hope. settled about the corners of a mount though 1 specially dreaded the byline which Venus herself m.gftt dace rn to hlch branched off towards the gyps) vied for Its outlines. "I lout that ea- ' encampment and which we must pans tire faculty of speech/unng fully ten minutes. 1 was 'true dumb, and only found my tongue LOU late to be 0t any tr, The speaker looked across at h•• hooters. Site was met by an amused air of Incredulity. -Let us bear the rtory. Kitty. I can't believe In your be Ing frightened; but unbosom your- self. dear I intend keeping you untii the men erre in to introduce my brother. so you've plenty of orae." Amid murmurs of excited anticipation Mrs. Treherne began: "It war an evening like this -dark and dreary with a thick, white fog. But I'd better go bee k to the begin- ning or you won't understand. We were living in Hlghfordshire during the last years of my husband's 11fe- time, and my dream was to become an artist. I'm sorry to say it W never directly. 'Then a new. strange feeling crept over nee. 1 was dreamily conscious of leaning heavily on the garotter's arm and finding It a strong one. wondering at the same time 1f this awful experi- ence was the punlahment of my dls- ot.rdlenee. How fervently I vowed that If I got safely out of this scrape nothing on earth would ever again tempt me to risk my lite after dark among the lanes of Treeletgb. "Suddenly we stopped. I gasped. still mute as a fish, and shut my eyes, tight Already. in anticipation, I felt the murderous knife at my throat. the robber's hand rifling my dead body. The arm around me perceptibly tight- ened its grip: my heart stopped beat- ing, when a dee(., musical voice whis- pered in my ear: 'There really are been reaJfsed footpads about. but you have no rea- son to be frightened. All I want from There was even at that time a you Is one kiss to last me my life - school of painting near us at Tree- Urae.' lelgh, and 1 seem found a lady *rust -Before I could recover my senses willing to teach me the rudiments. A the highwayman had pressed his lips drawback to complete happinese In my to my cheek. The spell was broken, newly -adopted vucatlon was the die- I opened my eyes with a piercing Lance between our honer and this sow shriek. Itut he had vanished as silent - man's studio, for Mr. Treherne, much lye and adroitly as he Lad come. All as he disliked my painting erase. se p saw was the indistinct light of a he called It, objected to my beim* lantern as our lodge -keeper opened the alone about the roads still more; and gate and hastened towards me. I must admit they were unoomi 000IY ••In a dazed kind of way I reached dart at times. 1 may add also" -and the bouae without further adventure. the droll look Crept up to her eyes- Who my assailant had been I never "he had two special bugbears. These knew. I assumed him to be a gypxy were the artists and the rued. impertinently retaliating on me for "Re declared they were all scamps, some of Mr Treherne's judgment* fAl'iT�A�L1T YLLI(. Oleo U.S tr parrwese of Agrti.alteww sad Ite neat ':.•.eat 811.11*. "Facts about Milk." a tie title et a very Interesting bulletin Just laateed by the dairy division o1 the United States ' Department ut Agriculture. and pre- pared by H. A. Parton, the assistant cblet ut the division. Must of tise mat- ter in this bulletin Is nut new, but it It is put in g,eud stupe tun popular use. We select the following trout It, us the characteristics of milk, and have had the illustrations reproduced, showing the appearance of different grades of milk magnified 3M) times: Milk Is a whitish, opaque liquid. To the ordinary observer it appears to be a perfect solution. and 1s common- ly regarded as such, being bought and sold by liquid measure, but when plac- ed under the microscope 1t is erten to consist of a clear, transparent fined euntalning many minute globules of various sizes. (See cut, b.) The fluid part, called the milk serum, casabas of water and all the otber a.nstltuenta of milk except the tat and these other constituents, although solids when separated and dry. are pra'tt.ally all dlseolved In the water, or, .ts le said. 1n solution. The globules are lttte• bodies of pure fat scattered tbrouSh the serum and not dissolved; they are semi-solid and Corm with the serum a mixture called an emulsion. The solid constituents present in the serum in largest quantity are sugar and casein; albumen and mineral mat- ter are present 1n small quantity. and there Is also a little fibrin resembling the fibrin of blood. There 1s more sugar In milk than any other solid component, but It is to solution. This milk sugar can be separated and SH/M MIL K o J O o• J o •o 0 and that. It 3 semi" from the aril' The voice te one I had never hear' Aces of the one, i should sooner or (.forebut • n remarkable w•as its low 1 later be garrotted by the other. The and peculiar quality. that i should re- 1 male sex he more particularly referred cognize It again among thousands. I to, but i must confess he had no very may add that my husband w -as so high opinion of the women either. vexed at my missing the cartage. 'Therefore, much as he hated his which had returned without me. and horses being out at night, he Maimed apse, et me making a show of myself on sending the carriage for me In all by shrieking outside our own gate, weathers, and I firmly believe the that 1 had to give up the school and coachman had orders to give a receipt my artistic dreams forever.•' for my person every evening. Thr completion of Mrs Treherne's "Whether the presence of a 500.7- narrative elicited a round of applause looking young fellow who awed to go and a fire of chafe. The hostess, keep - about with one of the artists, and Ing her eyes Axed on bet friend. alone whose, no doubt, well -Intentioned made no remark, when a noise outside i glances my husband hal surprised in betoke.ad the return of the men from church, contribute.' at ail to this hunttn_ frame of mind. I never knew. But i The door opened, and. following the had my suspl.lonx, although, as a host. there entered a tall, good-looking. matter of fact. I never so much as sunburned man or about 11e spoke to the man, or heas'd his name Mrs Treherne, .1111 immersed in her "One day In the winter, i had been Temfniscences, was gazing at the fire. working In the life class till atter Ave, when her hostess' vole. aroused her. and owing to a dense fog the carriage -Kitty. here Is my brother, who le waw late. 1 suppose 1 ought to have dying to be Introduced to you. Se ltae walled for It, but the temper in the only Just returned from South Africa shape of a girl friend persuaded me where he hu been ever since he left to take tea In her moms. Nor am Treelelgh many yearn ago." 1 quite clear it directions were left Mex. Treherne looked up with the at the studio to enable the carriage half -interested air of a woman to to And me. I whom a stranger has Just been pre - "I dare say you Imagine the party genteel She held out her hand. Included me. if you do, yolr are ••Inde.•41." she sale. carelessly: "d0 wrong. Whatever Mr. Treberne you also know that little artist colony'• thought, morals were very strict, 1 w e, weer just mentioning tt." can tell you, In Trelelgh. '•i thought no one ever remembered "We were halt a dozen guri students. Test/eat but me, Mrs. Treherne. Ten of whom one played divinely on the year's' ego 1 carried away from there 'cello, and it muet have teem quite an a memory that will last my lifetime." hour later before 1 started. my body- This remark. Innocent enough in It- g .tnrd not having turned Up, to ttredge self. was uttered In it particularly home to the mud alone. deep musical volts. Something quits 1 have sale the roads eiloid be very unusual In its timbre arrested the st- dark. but 1 n. -ver knew them so bei lenUon of everybody present. who, as they Mery on this particular even Mg. Lamps there were few even in the village. and the fog obscured such as there were. i felt very sorry for myself on leaving the oomper.tive illnrntnatlon of the street for the utter blackneow of the lonely road that lay between no. and home. "1 wondered where the brougham er • . • • ' - 0• 00 - .• • •;'•0• •. 00 . . o . 00 , o - eh o . , o • • o .... ., . ci et • a- Ca a aB M / L /f' d COt osrRvM ,satodio:9.• • 7 • t O p, ea ° • �^'1do'�i1r , M A Dcci oY, '•CCP �°°.•: o o- C'IMPOSiTION OF MiLK. brought into solid form; as sold, it re- sembles powdered white sugar. It is used to a considerable extent by drug - glom and in some food preparations. but Is not as sweet as cane sugar and to commercial value Is not sufficient to nduce Its manufacture in large queue; Mies. It is the sugar which under- goes the greatest change when milk becomes sugar. The casein and al- bumen of milk axe its nitrogenous constituents and are comparable to the white of an egg. Acid or rennet causes casein to coagulate, forming curd and, as such. it is one of the chief ingredients of cheese, oonstituting about one-fourth of that important food The mineral matter In milk. called ash or salts, U the Indestructi- ble part that remains when milk Is evaporated to dryness and burned: this consists chiefly of phosphates and Chlorides of sodas, potash and lime. jt M well known that when sugar is dibleo1Ted in water the solution is less limpid than pure water, and if many small bodies a little lighter than water were thoruughly mixed Into the solution their rise would be more or less re- tarded by the .stickiness of the sur- rounding nrrounding fluid Milk migbt be mom - pared to a thin syrup with many tatty and light particles floating in It. as just described. It is viscous or sticky, because of the solids held in solution. and the vlscoslty, together with Abrin, has a considerable effect In retarding the rise of the fat globules and the formation of the cream layer. The older milk 1s, the more effective are these forces. The fat globules are so small that a single drop contains many millions of them. It is said that if • person should attempt to count the globules In a drop or milk it would take ten years ..f his time, provided he counted at the nate of 100 per minute and worked ten :+•curs per day six days every week. Su••h • number U too large to 1e spree laced. The globules average about one' ten -thousandth •.t an inch in diameter, and twenty -Ave of average else placed side by side would about represent the thickness of varies la quantity (more the* tttR7 other part at the milk. remising ea low as two parts la one hundred &DA se blab as seven; the istrger the Pro- portion of fat the ricb.r Is the silt Must of tbe states and neap title. have a legal standard for the doer - pusitlo. of milk, any fa111sg below this standard Is legally regarde4 sa adul- terated. although It may be. la fack the sure sod natural product. The laws usually require f or 3 1-3 per bent. of tat, and a oe 1 1-3 per oest. ut 'Solids nut fat." Olds term is osim- monly used to designate all the gelid substances of milk other than tat) The "total solids" thus reciel ed vary from 12 to 13 per cent. according to different laws. watch means, of course. that in every 100 pounds of milk thew shall be le or 13 pounds of solid mat- ter. These legal requlreneenu are justified by the tact that et a the sole matter and not the water which gives value to milk. PRIVATE CUSTOMER& Why Mrs. Koch woad Prater* Thal, IMMO ' he Moro noetee•., 1 have heard complaints from setae who have tried furnishing butter to private. customer*. They say the* customers are over particular and given to fault finding. In short, that 1t a more trouble to cater to thele' tastes than the butter is worth. III all my experience I have not had the least trouble in this respect. Our cus- tomers all understand that if at any time • crock of butter does not suit they are expected to return 1t at our expense and 1t will be replaced by another. 1 think It la no those than right that a person paylr.g such a price for butter sbould get what they want. and 1 have found none who are any more exacting than 1 should be under the drcnttwstanoes. I may have been particularly fortunate in obtain- ing unusually desirable customers, but certainly there Is no fault or com plant. In our correapoodence, year after year. I have ever received most courteous treatment from both men and women- There has been nothing which would indicate the difference. serially speaking, between the wealthy patron and the poor farmer's wife, who supplies them with their dairy butter. We take great pains to make the butter look neat, and, although butter in a crock does not appear to the eye In the way that printed but- ter does, some difference is discerni- ble even there. It is the practice of some butter -makers to tie bits of old muslin over the butter. This is altogether too suggestive of Its form- er period of usefulness to please the fastidious pet•een. it is better to buy parchment paper, which comes cut in circles to At the different sues of crocks for this purpose. Pack the crock full to overflowing. then with a piece of wire cut off the butter directly at the top edge of the crock. Remove the surplus. place a circle of the parchment over it and smooth down and gee how neat 1t look. In summer sprinkle • layer of fine salt over the top to•prevent the heat from melting the putter and soiling the paper. We buy new light yellow paper to tie over the outside and think it looks much better than old newspapers. The name and address was formerly written on an express tag and tied to the crock, but our express agent favor• oriting it upon the top with pen and ink. se the tags are 'labile to get torn off in transit. Always give full weight. and a little more 11 any- thing. When you are getting a blue prior for butter you can afford to ba generous. -Mrs- E. M. Rockwood, in Farmers' Review. erwld be, and for "ere mimed Ira cnm- forahle cushion. and the Inspiriting presents of our fat coachman. The fog penetrated ties. nose and ears. 11 blinded me and made ale cough. "With Mete -utter. by std 01 my um- brella and the palings, 1 was .bit In keep upas the apotng7 ter a sidewalk. tAeugh to p>laroe b literally had to crawl along as heat 1 could. 'Just at first there were people about, grown lame mad indistinguish- able to the mist. A bey pained ate wbi.t1Mi • pnDs1sr Or. I envied hitt We eesred*, and would bay. 1lked 10 imitate it_ He t+ssa•A mt. and 1 tett More ioefy thea levee. The tree .rusk. lemma Ube lime shaanisn in . wood ter afi�s& YM the Abels dap& '1'31ss1 1 assi5 ?e4 bIan mealtime 1,1311 .tl tiyMt'sa 01 +'rets same ked as if impelled by a common impu(•e, looked across at ]urs. Treherne, and 1t must be admitted that that lady gave abundant cause for curiosity. At the first mond of the newe orner'e vote. she +tarred vi0lentiy.and stared at the owner thereof with an expression of mute dismay She made an effort to speak. but witheme truce -was, and fail- ing back In her chair, covered her face with her hands. ?or an instant there was silence. then name a buret of daughter. "The Ph*n•om of the Mtat they cried. - Madams V ..*.. Trona A Belgian company with a large capital has taken ostensive 'verb 1r* London for tem po1f•e• of making vtne- gar frown detail. and a large number of members of the gross were invited is teepee* the works the ether day Arnemost ether wassdees which they saw was a inert ensumbeda4 In wbbh Mar* were ea tower theta 111 Mier none emeger maw It .sesta that they are stile to tsars tan rte a seas thy than fifteen ta001..* a tleev d oate viwe- 1nr ever scow. The deer satiety mese Sem Plage► H! NEW MILK COOLER - Newry l.gesious Dairyman Can =tally ?Maks O.. at Nee•.. It 1s essential that milkmen cool their milk before It leaves the farm, and if it be air-000ted it will keep longer and wain a better name. A c..o)er of home manufacture (Fig. 'r) is a wood- en tr*me, six or seven feet In height. The separate sides (Plg. 2) may be made of tour strips, with as many crosspieces as necessary for stability (Fig. 1). A slight unevenness of struc- ture will not affect 11s usefulness 1f It but stand firm. The funnel (11g. 4), over which a cheesecloth strainer of many thicknesiea L hung, rests in ordinary writing paper. Globules M different sites are found In the milk of any cows but with certain breeds the alae is uniformly larger than with other breeds. The . milk of Jersey and Guernsey cows has the peculiarity. whirl explains why the cream rises se rea/U7 os It and why the skim - milk is so thin and poor. large globules naturally being able to get w the top more quickly than small ones. many of which carnet rise at all. , pile bssdred pounds of milk contain about the following .mounts of the afforest constituents : 37 pounds of valet. 4 pounds of tat. t pounds et milk sugar. 3.1 pounds of oasetn and albessie and 0.7 pound M mineral tatter or salts. These prnpo rtfots are gr&Mfa•/ly shown by TR 1. Them eonstltmein ts •e -v betwsen wale treads; chs total est is st sem may 11 se )Ow as be and as st rs .IlkWeem tracts 1e one hundred. 11/. varieties M duo to several assess. some at whines ars give. laser. The tat er 1-5 nig the apefeee at the top ea h c clears ef 1104 are na'leri on three inner *ides h I and in Fig 2) of the frame to hold t h.. t ink. wlech clears the floor several inches re• even a foot, Al ,,nling to the height of the frame. Thus the milk in gle a raft of two or three feet. T.i. fourth side tf) is left open to admit the tank. strip of tin riVeted aroutid Its upp •r edge. to retch on the eleatP. The milk may he drawn off by means of fatteet, or it may be dipped from the tank Mg. 1) into the cans llineerathie step. (Flg el are needed for an tetra high frame. and any emelt bey ean pour milk into the strehier coven d runnel arid dip 0 into cans when mint- ing is over Ptand it out of roach f dying chaff &nil odors Set tAe milk In a spring rather than en iee- an • hour or more. eonvenient. A epring. sheltered from the sun lov a rude board house. or only ahadel by trees. le better than any ks hones, Intik a tub or hoz into the spring or running stream; or scoop it wetter and wa11 it around With stone. not too deep from the cans to rem Ornity on the toendapea of Mean Where a spring Is am &reliable lee water Is a subotituto. lee carried le the milk cam wedged between abertbelpr muse aft eamplatitts of seer WOK Tin emery be• vies materetal aka, tee Imilinse- seNts. betli ma NMI moth waft*. armies& L. L. ?rid, le OomidelSe 11111111et. OVERWORK ->IDVOaID- Nervous Prostration b Psswsry by the Illso d "non* Mod Igo. se a malt of toe doss attenetou to haslasta. health tailed. I Maims weak. aorvoci. was turd& to look after my hiltsresis. aad madflooled all the symptoms et a de- aden. I %sok three bottles of Ayor's Ilestededlia. began to improve at oaas. sad gradually increased ray weight frost 011110 blind red and twenty-five to two hundred pounds. Since then. I WO Tny bluntly bays need this medicine whea needed, and we are all in the best of health. a fact which we attribute to ayerhs Sarsaparilla. I believe my chile dren would have been fat heriens toetay had it not been for Ayer's Sarsaparilla. of which preparation I cannot say too much." -11. 0. linmon, Postmaster and Planter, Kinard's, 8. C. DEVEIVIDD NEDAL AT 11/118L111 FAIL AYER'S Pins Save Doctor's 111411e. The Signal Job Priatingimihsisa whisk me smear pared eatable die skim ler the prompt aad amecties of all deems al mem may suggest comothimg yes meg he ini awed of, sad ta eash are we sali. eis pier madam that oar orrig.... pleaeoleslilij meet with the appreval et ear saireas, This useful miss is kept in the =fit vilia2tice IMMO MI Oda Will • I/ tow. i‘tatis are not so generally used, thy" an importmit place in miunercia correspondent*. Eiee what srtiv. got under the above hoods. In this line we have a very largo mom ot fine writing papers sok able for every class of Weimer rermented iu this locality, coma prising laid and wove, linens, quedrilks and other papers, ruled or unrided„ as may be required. If the " pay-myou-go" plan was the order of the day the demand or account paper would not be so great ; but there are some men who get so many demon that they wonder if the stock will ever run out. We don't intond it to, and at present our stock ia Alto in this line with four Wm. Good wiper and neat ruling. Both single anti double dollars and cents oolumna. They °Ouse cheaper than bill heada, and ant the proper thing to send after a delinquent onoe a month. They are sure to fetch him 'round— Owe„ ir•ser. that Sycamore -loaseesay Cure= ber el Tara. 'bit* read..red ear gale el be= eery now s: usee el bar times gags demned bea masa, et.e is satiate stoma whim Me Me sod hooptee-e. Poore to. 10, UM. Mem J. W. Soy loOur Caitlay. Mowry gm.m. des" toe 1,141.. 1••• been re mile rend me °ma" The above :sem are given in !bonnet. MOO aiassa OIL. Hamilton. the. dew' J ff. isle, Mae troto•Otly Sono. ad • weir tools.. apylillibl hosa:deati,ten. tele stomata trork stamp sidle. '1Iinaufasay ewe" Me maims mow NNIV:41AtNNI Clus-^r1; all inn, wee SON ilty =71tO a. oboes haw hoes J eigsmitst .ittio hi. ARMSTRONG BROS. IL -007.1711( Pump & Funial kill Wolin A lenge stock of very choice Pumps. maim- facteree hewn seleeeed Muskoka quartered pies with hearts eat out. Tame Pups ere seasanfaciared in • number of arks to snit everybody and every place Very easy waxiest tromps tor deep wells. ineseepped closed top pelage ter whoa - Yards. hones pumps. eta Mirk elate - Met lig must PUMPS kw upraylag tress. wasting beagles, waterlog gordesa. ovals- opeetal ausatioa gives to drawls, water frees well • Maumee how pumps. boa sod weed peeing; weed. trea soreelais hoed er N UM SAVO Mao, eatrrises aperai meets Waateirelli sear. 421•84.1 MIMS stigma sad Mete, -all Made Aft Moak antiMutted. Ida orders promptly sail ~shiny sesusded te. ARMSTRONG BROS & Co PUMPS BRISTOL'S PILLS Cure Biliousness, Sick Head. ache, Dyspepsia, Sluggish Liver and all Stomach Troubles. BRISTOL'S PILLS Are Purely Vegetable, • elegantly Sugar -Coated, and do not gripe or sicken. 1 PILLS # gently but prornptly and ,ughloy. "The safest family flow, it would be hard to get along without env and to keep up with the for them we keep a large stook oe hand. We have now about a hundred thousand in stock, and the prices, will range from 76c. Is $2.00 per It. We handle cm mercial and legal sizes exclusivelv. has already been partially emus crated in some of the heads abova There is, however, a vast &moon of work under this head that to enumerate would more than take up tbe entire apace occupied by this adv't, but we do it all at Tell to an "At Home or a wedding require considerable taste in melee tion sometimee, but we make it an easy matter by keeping in stock the very latest and bed sampler to be had. Call and es a entertainments and meeting promptly tamed out, from the plain but neat to the most slags/it with cord sad pencil attached. QAttAINAMS We aim to tox001 in all the differ cat kinds of work we tum ost. but especially in this, and keep in stock plain and fancy paper suitable for all requirements. This bead covers a large range work. from a bread or milk ticket to a is,st calling Gard, from an or. busman card or a hendecniely printed membership ticket. ostees Oar laoilitios tor tanuag cos ski elms el work are rridenoed by die feet that the great bulk ot it h done by us, This line Mee 12 whicsh oar three fast -rennin* PA probes* am able to tern out is surprieingly abort time. belong to the rider denartsood also, and we make a spe- 61t7 tham--preseptame being oar dm in this respect. A notice of web will appear in TRU Elloset fres of charge when bills for sem evert in the typographical prillieng in an impatiens end sr** seanaer sad Qom %%AIM 1111k1t. 11,4, Sewall *wink vreAssoekabke. W• eTteind our thenhe ler pad °Lv ors, and albeit a ocietinsanee ur NOM wt AIL Weessas Ura