The Exeter Advocate, 1897-10-28, Page 2o
o� 'Y' yo4,4
4' ,dt,'ti�03' `n.' It's rather difficult for parents to teach
b� tiG y 4
�
Oe cihildren to be absolutely honest and yet
SJ , ea vg them how to get rich.
0• 5.eN. e m y�$ �gry2o ,football men remind ns
ao ''c"v~ m `dve win through thin and thick
.a G.�ll t b battles we've assigned us
->� �a ��. lee
must kick and kick and kick
^• c5°ago'•1c" .very an -„g0 is the architect of his
-tease ow fortune, 'tut Fate usually makes
s many atsch ges in the original plan
ata 4eventsto palace may finally
:Pak , ;�@o�a wo, ; - ell.
/,ao,gje m
net' was once applied
to g:epo�i's w . �: not permitted to
give 'v. fn,rz ;'rt of justice.
b;laubscribers who do not receive their paper
regularly will please notify us at once.
Call at the office Mr advertising rates,
TIE EXETER ADVOCAti'. .
THURSDAY, OCT. 28, '1897:,
The Week's Commercial Summary.
The world's visible supply of wheat
Increased over 8,000,000 bushels the past
week.
Stooks of wheat at Port Arthur and
4Fort William are 1,058,196 bushels, as
against 1,051,689 bushels a week ago,
Band 1,044, 605 bushels a year ago.
A good trade in red winter wheat and
No. 1 Manitoba hard is reported, but
prices are weaker, ¶rhe former is selling
,iet 76o outside, high freights, and at
c Fort William.
There is no special variation in the
trade situation at Montreal since a week
ago. Country payments are generally
better, and further improvement is
looked for in this particular.
The business situation at Toronto is
sot perceptibly changed. A fair volume
of trade in general merchandise is re-
ported, and the tone of the market is
firm. In groceries there is a slightly
1ftgher market for sugars and canned
goods, tomatoes leading the advance in
the latter class. Orders for dry goods,
furs, eto., are fairly satisfactory,
The visible supply of wheat in the
-United. States and Canada increased
1,000,000 bushels the past week, and the
total is now 22,794,000 bushels as com-
pared with 62,434,000 bushels a year ago.
The amount of wheat afloat to Europe
decreased 240,000 bushels for tbe week,
and the total is 25,600,000, as against
29,120,000 bushels a year ago.
It is important to observe that, as
pointed out the other day in Power, the
term "horsepower" is misleading. That
journal says: "The term horsepower
when applied to a boiler, is always mis-
leading, besides tieing a misnomer to
start with. A hundred horsepower boiler
will supply steam for a modern engine
to develop 200 horsepower. The term
fshould be avoided when speaking of
18oilers whenever it can be gracefully
done, and we notice with gratification
than an English writer says of water
tube boilers that 'the approximate cost
emoted in £96 per 1,000 evaporation.'
That is to say, you can buy and erect
for 496 enough boiler to evaporate 1,000
pounds per of steam per hour. Yon can
use the steam of a pump at an expanse
of 200 pounds per'hour per horsepower,
making the' boiler supply five horse-
power: or a compound engine at au ex-
panse of 13 or 14 pounds. making the
boiler supply 70 horsepower: or you can
use it for boiling glue and generating
no horsepower at all."
Pointed Paragraphs.
Other people's troubles always bore us
more than our own.
There is very little waist material in a
fashionable ball dress.
Firmness is always admirable; stub-
bornness is always detestable.
?Many a man by not staying home
eights has been found out.
A man is seldom disappointed in love
until after he gets married.
Bachelors are women's rights and
Widowers are women's lefts.
The bashful lover is always in hot
water while trying to break the foe.
It is usually the theatrical orchestra
that drives men to drink -between the
ants.
Bicycling may not be deterimental,but
you seldom see a rider that is perfectly
straight.
He's a mean man who will deliberately
walk between a woman and a milliner's
window.
One of the disgusting sights in the
world is another fellow on a tandem
with your best girl.
It is always well to obtain what one
desires, but it is better to desire only
what one can readily obtain.
The small boy never worries half as
much about where the shoe pinches as
where the slipper stings.
torics OF THE WEEK
There ne "' `L• . ; and never will be, a
universal pa .v< a, in one remedy, for all
ills to which flesh is heir- jhe very nature
of many curatives bein h that were
the germs of other and ii a ntly seated
diseases rooted in the s tem of the
patient -what wo r eve gone ill in
turn would aggr t the *they. We
have, however, in nin_ine, when
obtainable in a sound lemadulterated
state, a remedy for mangeand grevetus ills.
By its gradual and judicious u9e, the
frailest systems are led into coQ��t�
and strength, by the influen
nine exerts on Nature's own des orat
.1t relieves the drooping spiritsty f
with whom a chronic state of new
epee
ui-
es.
Ose
d des-
pondency and lack of interest in life is a
disease, and, by tranquilizing the nervi
disposes to sound and refreshing slee
imparts vigor to the action of title bio ,
which, being stimulated, courses through-
out the veins, strengthening the healthy
animal functions of the system, thereby
making activity a necessary result,
strengthening the frame, and giving life
to the digestive organs, which naturally
d increased substance -result,
deman
im-
proved appetite. Northrop & Lyman of
Toronto, have given to the public their
Quinine Wine at usual superior Qs el rate,
and, gauged by the opinion of scientists,
this wine approaches nearest perfection of
a fir in the market. All druggists sell it,
HERE IS THE NEWS iN SHORT
ORDER,
Tidings from all karts of the Globe, Con-
densed and Arranged for Busy lteatiers.
CaNAlnXA1 ..
Tbusrsday, Nov. 25, has been appoint-
ed Thanksgiving Day.
Woodstook Curling Club will open
their new rink with a bonspiel.•
The soil at the Sarnia oil works is
similar to the soil in Petrolia.
The Claris Opera House, at St..
Thomas, is to be sold at auotion.
The City Council of Brantford sent
$100 to the Russell County fire sufferers.
Wm. Green was, killed at a Chatham
elevator by being drawn into the wheat
bin
The bodies of the four victims of the
Stittsville railway wreck were buried on
Saturday.
A man amed James McGuire, a canal
worker, was found drowned in the canal
at Iroquois.
The fund for the relief of the Russell
fire sufferers has now reached six thou-
sand dollars.
Ottawa was selected as the next meet-
ing
o
Ing 'lace of the Woman's Tem-
perance
Christian T
perance Union..
The report of the Assessment Com-
missioner of Ottawa shows an increase
in the city's population of 2,187.
Mayor Shaw, of Toronto, advocated
the establishment of two children's play-
grounds in each of the six oity wards,
A passenger on the M.C.R. train at
St. Thomas walked out of the ear and
left a wedding slake behind him.
The Watford Guide says Sarnia boys
pay no more attention to the curfew bell
than they do the Sunday school chimes,
A quarter of a million pounds of
cheese, valued at $25,000, were sold in
fifteen minutes on the Brantford market.
Ex -Mayor Johnson, of Ii$eaford, has
sunflowers which measure three and a
half feet in circumference. They're real
bloomers.
The Canadian Bankers' Association
has cabled to England a resolution op-
posing any departure from the gold
standard.
John Toulouse, of Dover Township,
was accidentally shot and killed while
out quail shooting with. Mr. Martin Car
lisle of Chatham.
Mr. W. H. Penton returned. to Napa-
neehis
e es a duties us teller in the
Dominion Bank but was notified by the
manager of bis discharge..
At Antigonish, N.S„ Henry Davidson
was found guilty of the murder of Wil-
liam Bowman at Traoadie. The crime
was committed in a drunken brawl.
Mayor Wilsou-Smith, of Montreal, on
behalf of a number of Canadian capital-
ists, has cabled to London an offer for
£250,000 of the new Canadiun loan.
Tenders for the new Canadian loan,
opened in London, showed that double
the amount asked for had been sub-
scribed at an average price of £91 lOs 5d.
Tbe coasting steamer Triton sunk off
the coast of Havana with 200 passengers,
soldiers and civilians and alarge amount
of Spanish treasure and munitions of
war.
R. F. Seymour, of Maidstone, is suing
Reeve Corbett for $2,000 damages for
statements alleged to have been made
by biro during the municipal contest last
January.
Atter a trial lasting several
days, W.
FI; Ponton, teller in the Dominion Bank
at Napanee which was robbed of $32 000
last August, who was charged with the
robbery, was brought to a oonoluson on
Saturday, when the prisoner was dis-
charged from custody.
Premier Hardy has written a note to
Lieut. -Col, ,Davidson, chair:nail of the
recent meeting of lumberman, pointing
out the gravity of the request of the
lumbermen and nromisiug that the sub-
ject shall be considered at the approach-
ing session of the Legislature.
The Toronto express on the Canadian
Pacific railway, due in Ottawa Thur;.iay
morning at six o'clock, collided with a
freight train between Stittsville and
Bell's Corners, with the result that two
employes of the company, a mail clerk,
and a tramp were killed, and both trains
wreaked.
Mr. McKee, storekeeper, of Orton,
owns a hen wkloh is in the big egg lay-
ing business, Her latest production is a
double egg, one inside of the other, and
both perfectly formed. Mr. Mo$ee, on
finding the egg, broke it to see if it had
double yolk, and discovered theother
a y
egg inside.
The Toronto Trades and Labor Council
passed a resolution approving of the ac-
tion of the Ontario Government and the
Postmaster -General of, the Dominion in
insisting upon the payment of the union
rate of waives by Government contrac-
tors. Tbe declaration of the Premier that
thisria iPls, established by Mr Mu -
lock,
lock, would bo extended to other
depart-
ments, also met with approbation,
re Collo and Kidney Difficulty. -Mr. J. W.
Wilder, J, P., Lafargeville, N. Y., writes:
"I am subject Go severe attacks of Colic
and Kidney Difficulty, and 'find Parme-
lee's Pills afford me great relief, while
all other remedies have failed, They are
the best medicine I have ever used." In
fact so great is the power of this medicine
to cleanse and purify, that diseases of all
most every name and nature are driven
from the body,
UNITED STATES
The Women's Equal Suffrage Club, at
St. Louis, Mo., is demanding the ap-
pointment of women street inspectors.
Air, Charles A. Dana, editor of The
New York Sun, died at bit home in Glen
Cove, Long Island, on Saturday after-
noon.
All October records in the Chicago
weather bureau was broken on Friday,
when the meroury touched eighty-seven
degrees.
The London press is adverse. to any
tampering with the silver question, and
until some decision is given by the Cab.
inet great uneasiness will prevail in busi-
ness circles.
At Cincinnati the balcony at Robin-
son's Opera House fell in at 8.30 Friday
night, during the performance of "Dan-
gers of a Great City." The house was
crowded. There were many casualties.
Marcus M. Towle, president of the
Hammond National Bank, and founder
of Hammond, Ill., is charged with rent-
ing buildings for improper purposes.
Other prominent men are also indioted.
Sleeplessnesss due to nervous excite-
ment. The delicately constituted, the
financier, the business man, and those
whose occupation necessitates great men-
tal strain or worry, all suffer lessor more
from it. Sleep is the great restorer of a
worried brain, and to get sleep cleanse the
stomach from all impurities with a few
doses of Parmelee's Vegetable Pills, gela-
tine coated, coutailiiug no mercury, and
are gnaratiteod to Give entisfnetion or the
money a, ill la- rel waled,
Mrs Lang bas been awarded x'20,000
damages against the City of Victoria for
the death of her husband, Dr, Lang, at
the Point Ellice Bridge disaster on May
25, 1896.
Mr. D. L. Moody, the evangelist, has
received a telegram from the Governor-
General expressing regret that be will
not be able to be present at bis meetings
in the capital.
Records at the Observatory, Toronto,
show that Friday was the hottest Octo-
ber day in the history of that institution,
the thermomemeter registering as high
as 36 degrees.
At the sale of the Royal Hotel furni-
ture the bedroom suite used by the
Prince of Wales during his visit to Ham-
ilton was sold to Mrs. J. N. Hendrie for
$47. Its original cost was $700.
Mr. Hays has offered the City of Mont-
real to move the Grand Trunk ,offices
from Point St. Charles to Victoria
square in the center of the city if grant-
ed exemption from taxation for twenty
years.
Dr. Borden, the Dominion Minister of
Militia, says that the order providing
for the retirement of commanding officers
after four years' service applies to the
whole service, both permanent and vol-
unteers.
At the semi-annual meeting of the
Grand 'Trunk shareholders, held in Lon-
don, the president announced that .here
was a surplus of thirteen thousand dol-
lars, and the outlook ahead was very
favorable.
John Inkster, of Feversham, claims
the proud distinction of having built the
first boat that ploughed. the Yukon.
That was forty years ago, when Mr. Ink-
ster was in the service of the Hudson
Bay Company.
Dr. Labarge, Medical Health Officer of
Montreal, states that so far fifty thou-
sand people have been vaccinated; but as
that is only one-fifth of the population
of the city, he advises that the campaign
should be kept C.D.
Lieut. -Col. Bliss was out driving at
Ottawa with bis three children and nurse.
The horse ran away and the rig upset.
Col. Bliss was seriously injured, and it
is doubtful if he or the nurse will recover
from their injuries.
The statement of the Dominion Gov-
ernment for the first quarter of the pres-
ent yearshows the income to be 2531,-
521 less, and the expenditure to be $850,-
000 more than during the corresponding
months of last year.
So strong have been the protests
against the removal of Lieut. -Col. Otter
from Toronto that Dr. Borden, Minister
yl�lliiliti.a, explains that he has no inten-
titan• of changing the popular and efficient
officer in command of the Toronto dis-
trict.
The Canadian horse suspected of glan-
ders which was landed in England on
September 9, has been subjected to a
inat'on byv'eterin=
poet -mortem exam a
ary expert, who reported that, the dis-
ease was contracted after the animal
landed.
r Ot1stG\.
The corporation of London is going to
have an art gallery.
Argentina's wheat for export is esti-
mated at 1,000,000 tons.
The Chilian Senate is discussing the
bill for retaliatory tariff against the
United States.
The jubilee gifts and addresses to the
Queen are on exhibition at the Imperial
Institute, London.
General Booth, of the Salvation Army,
bas gone to Germany. He talks of con-
verting Emperor William.
Lord Salisbury's retirement from the
office of Prime Minister is discussed as a
possibility by The Daily Chronicle.
The Budget Committee of the French
Chamber of Deputies bas voted to in-
crease the standing army by 12,000 men.
Edward. Langtry, the husband of Lily
Langtry, died on Friday in the lunatic
asylum to which he was committed last
week.
Mr. Gladstone has declined to accede
to a request that he intervene to bring
about a settlement of the engineers'
strike.
The foundation stone of what is in-
tended to be the great commercial port
of Russia in Asia was laid Friday with
great ceremony.
It is stated that all the preliminaries
have been agreed upon for an alliance,
defensive and offensive, between Bul-
garia and Turkey.
A veterinary expert has reported that
Canadian horses landed in England on
September 9th afflicted with glanders,
contracted the disease -after landing.
It is stated in Paris that an associa-
tion has been formed in the United
States to secure the escape of Captain
Albert Dreyfus from his prison on the
Isle du Saint.
At St. George's church, Hanover
square, London, on Saturday, the Mar-
quis of Waterford was married to Lady
Beatrix, the youngest daughter of the
Marquis of Landsdowne.
It is understood that tbe next Imperial
budget will propose an extra grant of
£1,000,000, to provide _11,000 additional
men for the army, and some ameliora-
tion of the soldier's lot, with a view to
attracting recruits.
James Kier Hardy, chairman of the
English Independent Labor party, pro-
poses, with the view of supporting the
striking engineers, to pool all the funds
of all the trades unions as a fighting
fund, and then to proclaim a general
strike, thus, bringing the trade of the
nationto a standstill.
For Nine Years -Mr. Samuel Bryan,
Thedford, writes: "For nine years I
suffered with ulcerated sores on my leg;
I expended over $100 to physicians, and
tried every preparation I beard of or saw
recommended for such disease, but could
get no t'eiief. I at last was recommended
to give Dr. Thomas' Eclaet lo Oil a trial,
which has resulted, after using eight bot-
tles (using it internally and externally),
e. I believe iti
Iet cur s
a com a the best
in p
medicine in the world, and I write this to
let others know what it has done for
me.
THE "SMITHY'S" DAUGHTER
attacked by That Most Insidious of Ma-
rsod.rrs-Kidney Disease -Gets Good
lleuitla itao1. by Using South American
Iilcl'fey Cil re -A. Kidney Specife,
Theophile Gadbols, of Arnprior, writes : "My
daughter was a great sufferer from kidney dis-
ease, Medical inert did their best for her and
we tried all t remedies at command, and not
until South American Kidney Cure was tried
did she get env benefit. Three doses brought
great relief. Two or three 'bottles completely
eat ed her -ant a sign at halm or disease of any
kind left. It is truly a wonder worker."
The Size or the Moon.
The moon is a comparatively small
world; yet, although three of Jupiter's
and one of Saturn's moons.are much
Larger, it is, in proportion, to its prim-
ary, the largest satellite of the solar
system. Its diameter is twenty-one hun-
dred and sixty nines, which means that
it would take forty-nine moons to make
a globe the size of the earth. -Alden W.
Quimby in Ladies' Home Journal.
COUNTLESS BODILY AILMENTS
Directly Attributable to a Disordered
Nerve System -Dispelled in a Burry by
the Great South American Nervine --Get
Well and Keep }-e11 With It.
Noble 'Wright, Dairyman, of Orangeville
sal s : "For a number of years I was a great
sufferer from indigestion and dyspepsia. My
aver and kidneys bothered me. I treated with
many doctors, and used many remedies. Ipro-.
cured South American Nervine. One bottle
greatly benefitted the and six bottles entirely
cured ine, and to -day I am as well as ever I
was; It is a great remedy and I am glad to be
able to recommend it always."
The Judge Was Might.
Judge -You are accused of killing
your pest friend.
Prisoner --He bit me, sir.
Judge -I should have thought that
that would have been the last thing be
would do.
Prisoner --It was, sir,
The Village Blacksmith's Song -Years of
Pain—nut south American Rheumatic
Cure Fielded the Link Which Binds Rho
to Gond Health Again.
This is what J, II, Gadbois, Blacksmith, of
Arnprior, Ont., says : "I was a great sufferer
from acute rheumatism. I used many remedies
without relief. I was inctrtee(1 to try South
American Rheumatic Cure, The first dose
clued me, and before I had used half the bot-
tle I was greatly benefitted. It has cured ale,
and, I heartily recommend It to all sufferers trona
rheumatism."
Without Conceit.
"I supposed you talked about other
women at the sewing society this after-
noon," said Mr. Cawker to his wire.
"Yes," replied Mrs. Cawker. "Women
aro not so conceited as men, who talk
about themselves."
A Cure for Cancer.
Elsewhere in this issue of this paper
will be found an advertisement of the
ABBOTT MYRON MASON MEDICAL
CO, All who suffer from cancers will
do well to write to this company for ha -
formation. No money isasked inad-
vance. They are highly indorsed by the
lea i medical •ural . If youor any
ng n et �o n s
friends of yours are suffering write at
once to Abbott Myron Mason Medical
Company, 577 Sherbourne street, Toren-
to, Ont., for 130 -page book, with testi-
manias from those who have been oared,
all free.
A.Wheeling Tucident.
Bubbles- My wife and. I met by acct
dent -thrown together by chance, as it
were.
Wheelwoman seageriy)-Did you break
the bicycles?
$100 Reward $100.
The readers of this paper will be t,. ,nscrl to
learn that there Is at least one dreaded disease
that science has been able to car • , , all its
stages, and that is Catarrh. IIall' C:tt,trn: Cure
is the only positive cure known to t,.e un &cal
fraternity. Catarrh being a eonstitut,uual dis-
ease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's
Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting direct-
ly upon the blood and mucous Surfaces of the
system, thereby destroying the foundation of
the disease, and giving the patient strength by
buildin+•uptbe constitution and assisting na-
ture in doing its work. The proprietors have
so much faith in its curative p.,n'ers, that they
offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it
fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials.
Address' F. J. CHEN EY & Co.
rdi Sold by Druggists, Ise. Toledo 0.
A French Joke,
"I am sorry, monsieur, but I cannot
consider your proposal. I than never
marry "
"Never marry? But, mademoiselle,
what do you intend to do with your im-
mense fortune?"
Bard to Beat.
"This," said the man of the house, as
he mournfully surveyed three carpets and
ten rugs banging on the clothes line;
"this is a combination bard to beat."
Why will you allow a coag* to lacerate
your throat and lungs and run the risk of
filling a consumptive's grave, when, by
the timely use of Bickle's Anti-Consump-
a the pain can be allayed and the
Syrup p S
danger avoided. This syrup is pleasant to
the taste, and, unsurpassed for relieving,
healing and curing all affections of the
throat and lungs, colds, coughs, bron-
leitis, etc., etc.
AGNTS WANTED TO SELL
«ARMEDA
CEYLON TEA,"
Put up iniead packages.
Also Japans and Hysons.
A. Ii. CANNING .St CO., Wholesale Agents,
57 FRONT ST. EAST, TORONTO.
ASR YOUR DEALER FOR
BOECKH'S
BRUSHES and BROOMS.
ie'ur sale by alt leading .houses.
CHAS. BOE4iiii vc SONS, Manufacturers,
TORONTO, ONT. •
FARMERS,
DAIRYMEN
.And Their Wives
m.
Drop us a post card, and get free
' our booklet on
• _ "INDURATED FIBREWAREi' 0.
4,g It costs nothing,' tells all,. about ,
Indurated Fibre Pails,Milk Pans,
Dishes and Butter Tabs, and
will put mon v in your pockt s.
The E. B. Eddy Co.
,
LIliIITED.
HUL L CANADA.
•
•
sD •d
4
• Everyone Who Makes Three or More Words From the List Below Gets a
Prize ; $1610,00 for a Complete Correct List. Road our Offer Carefully. °f•
°
r► The Following Sixteen Words Each Have Dashes Where Letters Should Ap.
•
4, pear, The Proper Letters in These Spaces Make Complete Words Which We •
Have ChosCn, Answering the Description Accompanying Each Word. CAN YOU
O DO IT?
41* Here Are the Word Riddles. Can TW. Solve Therm ?
Explunailoa—Each dash ap-
pearing
t• peefd
wodindicates the bsne oa
certain letter, and wh•'n the pro-
per letters are supplied the
original word we have selected
to form each riddle will bofound
complete. EXAMPLE:
"something every good man
should have." In this case the ♦'
omitted letters arra I and E, and
when properly inserted make
the word wife.
e 1. aA-ER-C- The best country in the world.
Z2. T -BA -C- A weed used by many men,
3■ -0A- Used in laundries, ,
4. -EA-TY Something a man admires in a woman.
5. -1-}IT Something Fitzsimmons would do for money.
ss QU EE_ VI CT - -
,. ,. Thought mora of by titled Eng-
fish nobility than by A.mcrican
workman.
Z7s C -. -.M.S A feast day icnhurches. winter celebrated in
8. C -TT.. Raised iii Texas and other Southern States.
9. -- --O-R-Pn..9 A person often employed by a news-
paper.
r 10■ -W.-
Something a person is liable to get in Alaska.
• 11. C -L -M -CS Agreat discoverer..
14. N- --0-14
- - -N0'R-PHY A system
em of writing used in o
ffice
s
.
13. -0L-AR- Something everyman 1tkeato have plenty of.
A seaport town on the Atlantia Coast,
• 15. W -T -H Something nearly every one wears
16. B -Y -E Name of a great publisher in Chicago.
S
••4
CONDITIONS
Make out your list of six-
teen words, as above, using
the letters appearing in each
word and substituting for
the dashes the letters you
think should appear. No list
will be considered if it has
t
T is more than 16 words.his
a fair offer to pay $100.00 for
brains to earnest workers.*
In case there is more than
one correct list received ac-
cording to conditions above
we will pay 2100.00 each to the ten persons sending correct lists that are best
and neatest in appearance.
Every person making I4 or more corrected words accordiug to condi-
tions will receiveshandsoino solid gold watch. Proxy person sending
12 or more corrected words, according to conditions, will receive a 2
you-gold filled watch.
Everyone having 3or more correct words according to conditions
will receive a handsome present of our selection of the following: Andes
diamond scarf pin nr stmt, elegant cluster ring of ruby or emerald stones,
gald plated earrings, brooch, stick pin or watoh charm. We guarantee
satisfaction with the presents we tend.
Remember these presents are free but no list wilt be considered un-
•leseyou are a subscriber to Boyre's Monthly. We therefore require you
to send 25 rents for one year's suberri tion to our monthly. When you
send in your list DO NOT SEND ANSWERS WITHOUT subscription,
as such answers will receive no attention and cannot possibly win even if
correct. Wrap silver securely in paper before enclosing 11 fu envelope 10
prevent loss by mail.
H O W CAN WE DO THIS?
.• BOYCE BUILDING
♦ 11.1-114 Dearborn St
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We have undertaken to build a tremendous circulation in •a short
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BOYCE'S MONTHLY, BOYCHICALCDiHC,
4
0044444444@4N401 4.04.4• 44,6•fN•N•?r•A••••N• +N••
TFie Olin Gas and
Gasoline Engines
THE OLIN ENGINES
FUFUELare made from 2 horse
�J Power to40 Horse Poorer
and may be run with gas-
oline, manufactured or illuminating
gas, producer or natural gas.
As gasoline is always an avail-
able and economical fuel, the Olin
engine was designed with special
reference to its use. The gasoline
is taken from a tank (which may
be located at a distance from and
below the engine) by a simple pump
and forced into a mixing chamber,
which is kept hot by the exhaust.
For all Power Purposes.
VIVMPLEST, STRONGEST,
STEADIEST, MOST ECONOMICAL.
By this system we secure a perfect vaporizing of the ;fluid which is
mixed with air before entering the cylinder and a low grade of gasoline may be
used—in fact, almost a kerosene.
ADVANTAGES OVER STEAM.
The first cost is less than the cost of installing a steam plantof equal
No boiler to keep in repair.
No boiler -house or coal storage room required.
No coal, ashes or cinders to cart and handle.
No dirt, dust or soot.
No fire or smoke. (The smoke nuisance is abolished).
No steam or water gauges to watch.
No danger of explosion.
No skilled engineer required.
No waiting to get up steam.
No increase in insurance, but in the near future a decrease.
THE OLIN GAS ENGINE MAY BE PLACED ANYWHERE IN. YOUR SHOP. IT
REQUIRES VERY LITTLE FLOOR SPACE.
WHAT USERS SAY •
SHERBURNE, N. Y., Nov. 24th, 1896. 0
OLIN GAS Enema. Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Gentlemen :-11y engine works fine ; better and better each day I run it. 1
start it in the morning and do not stop until 8:00 or 8:30 at night. I like the engine
first rate. To -day nave been running the 20 -inch burr mill. the iron mill, the cob
and corn crusher and the elevator, all at the same time. grinding corn, cob and grain,
and then I changed and left off the corn crusher and lint on the shelter in its place,
and all worked well. But I can't ket,p Yip with my work. I want a larger engine the
worst way. Would you advise me to put in a 10 or 15 horse power next ?
Now using a 5 horse power gasoline engine. F. A. COLWELL
capacit;..t
LAFARGEVILLE, Nov. 28th, 1896.
THE OLIN GAS ENGINE CO.. Buffalo, N. 1i',
Gents :-The 20 h.p. Gasoline Engine You placed in my mill last September is
giving perfect satisfaction, in fact it is doing a great deal better than I expeoted it
could. I find it a great saving in expense over steam, as it requires no care whatever
after starting and steam requires an engineer. I also find it runs with less expense
for gasoline than a steam engine requires for fuel. It is a very powerful machine, in
fact, we have never used the full power of the engine, and grind 70 bushels per hour
right along. I think I have the best feed mill in the State with the Olin to drive it.
It will give me pleasure to recommend it to anyone contemplating putting in power.
Very Truly Yours, L. L. JEROME.
SOLE AGENTS FOR ' Toronto Type Foundry Co., Ltd.,
CANADA,
Send for Descriptive Circular and Price List. TO F ® NJ TO.
CANCER TVMolt AMo
ALL MALIGNANT
BLOOD
too.,PACE
ji GLANCE AT THE
cut will show that the
J-IANDY- HANDLE is a. abet
useful kitchen article.
Agents, male or female,
you can make $5 per da
ell.ing'it., Secure your
territorybefore it is
too late. Enclose
1p e for sample and
(tail. particulate.
e•
A. Swanson,
Poet Erie, Ont.
IN OSE.
Lunacy is from lung, the moon, Hi
once being a popular belief that all men-.
nal aberration was caused by the moon.
JA(ENTS rioR SIX FAST -SELLING
household Articles. SeiOr�
tal for particulars. R 8117 II
18014 & PARSOgi , Toronto.' t-438
T. N. U. •
188
It matters not whether you are going to work on. the 1
farm, in the workshop, or the merchants or maniac.
ate '
t rs
once
you need
in order to succeed eedwell thorough
rrtheAnnouncement
.f the Northern Business College for full particular&
♦ddress..C. A. Fleming, Principal, Owen Sound.,0.,.