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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1897-11-4, Page 6• *a Subscribers who do not receive their pope 'regularly will please notify us at ones. Call at the office for advertising rates TILE EXETER ADVOCATE, FRIDAY. NO?. I, 1897. The Week's Commercial SIMI/larye The net gold balance of the - inited States treasury is over $150,000,00. Canadian Pacific's gross earnings for the second week of October were $ '"44 w a 000, an increase of $204,000. : The earnings of the Grand Trunk Rail- way for the week ended October 14th show en increase of .$25,813 Stocks of wheat at Toronto are 38,577 bushels as against 37,804 bushels a week ago and 2377,251 bushels a year ago. Tbe trade distribution at Montreal, taken as a whole, is of a 'very fair sea- sonable character, with most houses the volume of trade being a good deal ahead of last year. In general dry goods, and kindred lines, business may be called good. Prospects are exceedingly bright for a lar i g mmigration of farmers into Mani- toba and the Northwest Provinces in the spring. Land companies are doing well ,and will do better. This accounts for the bullish feeling in Northwest Land and Ontario and t,>*u .13ppella stocks.. The a �. visible b supply: of what in the United States and Canada luereased 1,- 186,000 bushels last week, and, the total Is now 23,930,000 bushels as compared with 54,80S,00u bushels a year ago. The amount of wheat afloat to Europe is 26,- 000,000 bushels, an increase of 400,000 bushels for the week. A. year ago the amount afloat was 3u,400,000 bushels. Abut fourn About and million hlf bags of coffee ha\e already yaOie late ei ht and there ample m ie 12'8 t for a th remaining p Jeer millions to appear and make th crop equal the maximum estimate. The heavy movement, together with weaker European markets and an increase in the American visible supply almost to 900,000 bags, brought a reaction to 7 cents for No. 7 Rio. General wholesale trade at Termite is fairly satisfactory, When weather condi. tions are taken into consideration) the movement is most encouraging. The steady demand on wholesalers for nearly all lines of merchandise is evidence of the comparatively light stooks held at country points and of returning confid- ence. Manufacturers are busy and in many "cases mills are running overtime. A common error has been made In supposing that there never would be any xadically new 's di. coveries in farming methods. Farmers seem to have settled down to permanent continuance of old methods, presuming all is known that ever can be known. But this bas recently been shown to be a mistake, as Is illus- trated in the Campbell method of grow- ing crops. allusion to which has been made in these eolumus. From an Iowa exchange we learn that a series of tests has been made under the old and new system. And what a difference! Wheat grown under the old system had heads about two inches long, with straw no larger than a knitting needle, and an average height of about fifteen inches, and is nearly ready to cut, while the other has heads that will average four inches long, a large internal that is not nearly fined yet, with a Iarge, strong stalk, and is of a dark green color and will not be ripe for two or three weeks yet. Under the old way one and one-half bushels of seed were sown to the acre, the result being that when it came up it did not stool at all, but sent up one spindly stack from each grain of seed, -while the other was drilled in rows twenty inches apart, one peck of seed being to the acre and it has steeled out sufficiently to nearly cover the intervening space between the rows, and from seventeen to twenty stalks spring up from one grain of seed. Mr. Campbell estimates that the yield under his method will be 250 per cent. greater than the yield under the old Fancy the difference this will make in the ability of the farmer to pay his mortgage and other debts? --American Investments.. Across the Sea. It is illegal to practice hypnotism in Belgium. In Japan every child is taught to write with both hands. Gambling mania is now accepted in France as a ground for divorce. A Spanish bullfighter's fee for a spec- ial performance is about $3,550. Alexandre Dumas the younger's daughter, Colette, is about to marry a Dr, Metza. The estimated washing bill of London is upwards of £5.000,000 per annum.' Twelve million hats are made annu- ally in the united kingdom, worth 46,- 000,000. The number of inhabited houses in London is estimated at about 548,800. The greatest length of England and Scotland, north to south, is about 608 miles. There is about twice as much beef as mutton consumed in Scotland and Eng- land. Joseph Chamberlain is said to bare lost 8250,000 in the attempt to make sisal raising in the Bahamas profitable. The inmates of English prisons who cannot read or write receive compulsory education twice a week. A great authority on fish . says that every square mile of the sea is inhabi- sed by 120,000,000 finny creatures.. Out of the enormous number of women Sri Constantinople—the population is nearly a million—not more than 5,000 can read or write. There are 48,000 artists in Paris, more than half of them painters. The number of paintings sent to the exhibition last year was about 10,000. Lieut. Boiteux, of the French navy, who was the first man to enter Timbua- too wben'it was captured, recently shot himself through the head the day before that set for bis wedding. In 1870 the Duke. of Galliera began to. spend thousands of dollars a year collect- ing rare stamps. To -day his collection is, believed to be the finest in the world, and is`valued at $1,260,000. The captain of a big Atiantio liner, atter many ealoulations, has come to the conclusion that the general size of a fog In the Atlantic is about thirty miles in diameter. "Jack Frost will nip the yellow fever." "Yes; and the Klondike fever, too," TOPICS OF TIIE YEEK HERE IS THE NEWS iN SHORT ORDER. x re sees frorn all karts of tb . Grebe, Con- t„ rl+ecl and Arranged for Busy ?teaders. lloi';*evain, Man., is building a $8,000 rink. Thomas Duley was killed at Camp Palmer while felling tree& Jir. Thomas Sullivan, of Hamilton, was killed by a si unting engine e mthe T., 11. & B, Rev. Canon Reelect has authorized the priests of the Archdiocese of Montreal to pray for rain. The Quebec Legislature is summoned to meet ror the despatch of business on rhe 23rd prox. The water of the Ottawa river is very low, and there are many eases of typhoid fever at Ottawa. Fall wheab in the neighborh',od of 3litebell bas been much hurt by the con- tinued dry weather. Fenelou Falls Chemical Works bane given a contractfor 2 5 00 cords of hard- wood d wood at 82per cord. Destructive bush fires on the Eingsrnere mountains, near Ottawa, are threatening the village of lingslllere, The Amount of property* exempt from municipal taxation at Ottawa is esti-, tutted at over $15,000,000. Jubilee stamps will soon be at a pre. *lusts, as the Post -Office Department supply has been exhausted. 91r. J. D. Moore, of St. Mary's, has recently sbipped four cars of 800 oases of eggs to Glasgow, ;;ootland. Thomas Branton, formerly of St. Thomas, 1 o 1 , w h was reported dead. at Iii - ton, Montana, ie alive and well. The bye -elections in Tolnisrouata, Iiiiucuskl, and Drummond and Artha- baska are fixed for November 13. Provincial Dairy Inspector Macdonald ,ays Manitobees output of butter will exceed that of last year by $100,000. Bush fires on the Kingsmero moun- tains, a few miles from Ottawa, are threatening the village of I Ingsmere. The Government tug St. James, with Hon. Mr. Tarte and a party on board, collided with a sailing vessel near Client - plebe. A petition is being circulated at Na- panee for the retention of a.Ir. Baines as manager of the Dominion Banc: at that place. Ma A. Pepler, agent of the Dominion Bank at Guelph, will be transferred to Napanee, Mr. Stanton, of Toronto, suc- ceeding hint. Wm. MIclarty, the Tilbury farm band who attempted to assault a thirteen - year -old girl, was sentenced to six months in the Central. There is a proposition before the Gov- ernriient from the Rathbun Lumber Company for the manufacture of wood alcohol in Canada, Elverson Austin set six bear traps near Eagle Lake. Nest morning he had a big tassels bear in every trap. This is the hunter's own story. At the anniversary service of the Charles street Methodist church, Inger- soll, about $2,500 was raised by collec- tion and subscription. No work is being done on the oil and gas wen, and Tilbury's chance of secur- Ina either of these luxuries is not now considered very bright. Peterboro is on the lookout for manu- factures, and a Council committee is dickering with a concern that will give employment to 200 hands. Geo. McIntyre and W, J. Clement, of Brandon, killed ater r a g snaky which measured about 16 feet in length, at Lake Clements, near the city. In the Supreme Court at Ottawa judg- ment was rendered in the City of To- ronto v. the Toronto Railway, allowing the motion and quashing the appeal. Mr. S. M. Sovereign, of Simcoe, had an adventure with a gold brick swindler, but, contrary to the usual order, he was $50 ahead when the swindler got away. John Hamilton, Adam Loudon and James Sammons were committed for trial at Sherbrooke on a charge of per- jury. Thomas Gallagher was discharged. Ottawa Board of Trade wants legisla- tion to authorize a civics board of con- trol, similar to Toronto's, composed • of the Mayor and three aldermen chosen by the Council. J. Glassford,• a prisoner in the London jail on a charge of assaulting Miss Be - vine, a school girl. near Newbury, escaped from the prison by climbing over the wall. During a revival meeting in Rich- mond, Va., the Rev. T. H. Leavitt prayed that two women who Laughed during the service might die immediately and go to hell. New Carlisle, Que., was en fete on Saturday, it being the occasion of laying the first rail on the Atlantic and ,Lake Superior railway. Judge Wetmore says that Crime is not frequent in the Northwest Territories, owing to the splendid discipline exercised by the N. W.M.P. It would be a mistake to reduce the force. Mrs. John. A. Manly, wife of the Mayor of Grand Forks, B. Q., publicly whipped Charles. Cummings, the town- ship agent. She claims Cummings'tried to sully her good name. The pipe line being laid !rem the oil fields of Enniskillen to the Bushnell Oil Works in Sarnia is completed, and prude oil is being pumped through the pipes to Sarnia in large quantities. An enormous sturgeon was caught in, the bay at Midland on Saturday last. It weighed 110 pounds, and was found to oontaiu three ducks, whish this modern whale had swallowed bodily. Tbe Minister of Agriculture bas ap- pointed Mr. J. E, Starr, a Nova Scotia frnic-grower, to go to England to inves- tigate and report on the extent c2 the market offered there for Canadian fruit. William Klingbite, aged fourteen, while out shooting near Windsor, Ont., was accidentally shot by his young com- panion by the premature discharge of a gun. Ilingbite is not expected to`re- cover, Thomas Laperrie and bis wife, of Sherbrooke, Que,•, Found guilty of an attempt to cause the death of the form- er's little daughter by means of ill-treat- anent, were sentenced''- on Saturday to leve years each in the penitentiary. Orillia. people are discussing a scheme to obtain 750 horse-powerI,,, from the falls of the Severn river, about 10 miles dis- tant, and proposes to attract a host of manufacturers by offering free power and ademption from taxes. Chief Justine Amour has given judg- mept for total damages of $1,150 against Deputy Returning : Omcer E, 1 . ,Flem- ing, of London, for refusing to allow Mr. Ira Collins to vote in the last Dominion eleotion and for causing bis arrest. Mr, J. B. Qircllestone, general man- ager of the Bristol and Avonmouth docks, addressed the Montreal Board of Trade. and pointed out the improvements needed in the harbor to enable it to afford proper accommodation to mode vessels, The fish Commissioner of Waehingt places the pack on the Pacific coast follows: Puget Sound, 894,600 oas Fraser River, 878,650, and upper Brit' Columbia rivers, 150,000; Alaska, 000,000; Columbia River, 484,000. Tot 2,907,150, - The Russell County fire fund n amounts to nearly $22,000. It is ea that about $50,000 will be required the Central Committee is to be enabl to carry out its plan of giving the stiff ers money or lumber with which to build. Mrs. Louise Villeneuve has been rested on the of I char m 1d ' g gur erin h husband at Bayside. The Coroner's ju returned a verdiot against the woma with her two alleged accomplice the Chartrands, she was remanded 't Tuesday The liberality of Canada's subsori to the India famine fund w officially acknowledged, when Mr. Cour ney, Deputy Minister of Finance, . ceived a letter from the Chief Justice Bengal, who says that, with the orae tion of the United Kingdom, the large contribution has come from Canada. UNITED s'r.TES. The international sealing oonferen which Great Britain d declined lined to to art opened at Washington. part, P Mr. justice Wieser, LL.D., librari of Harvard and president of the Ame can Library Association, died at Cam bridge, Mass. After much controversy, the oommitt of the Philadelphia Girls' High echo have admitted Victor Huga's "Les Mi erables as a teat book. Dr. Newton Bateman, for seventee years president of h'nox College, Gale burg, In., and an educator of nation reputation, died of heart disease, Tee jury in the case of Luetgert, th Chicago sausage manufacturer who wa charged with the murder of his wif has disagreed, standing nine fax oonvic tion and three,for acquittal. A. short thee ago, in a tit of displease at his twin sons, George M. Pullm made a will disinheriting them, littl thinking at the time that death was s soon to give permancy to the legal docu merit. • FORE:Wee Yellow fever has broken out in Ja maker with unusual virulence. FIFTY YEARS OF PROGRESS THE SUCCESS OF A GREAT CAN- ADIAN INDUSTRY. A Short Sketch of the Mammoth Plant Where the Most Fatuous Malt Liquors. That Canada Produces Are Manufac- tur'ed—A 'Toronto Writer` Describes 'tis Visit to the Establishment of the Carl- in M. Co. (Limited), London: rn From The Toronto Globe, Sept. 18, 1897. The Immense mznense establishment of the as above company, covering a ground area es, of 38,000 feet and five stories in'height, sit with elevator running from top to bot- tom tom, stands out conspicuously as one of al, the leading manufactories of London. It was founded: ou a small scale fifty years ago by the late Thomas Carling. It is ow one, however, whose fame and reputation �f is not confined to London or Canada alone, but is known all the world over. ed 'Through the kindness of Sir John Cart- er- ing The Globe's representative had yes - re` terday the opportunity of examining into the resources of this immense in- ar- duster, and he was amased not only at er thegigantic operations carried.. on, but at. ry the amount of machinery h eery and stook an, ncessary to conduct a business of this s, ruagnitnde. London is exceptionally fav- ill ored in having swab an industry within its Melts, while the oalnpany are to be i p-. congratulated Ga of v g d I h 1 a u their lane in €' t as sueli a flourishing city, and surrounded t- by counties whose fertile acres well en- re- title them to be called "the garden of of Canada," In all the products of the com- p- pany the same oars as to the tone and six excellence of the duality of liquors is ob- served, ]'heir celebrated porter deserves espec- ial mention, not only as being an excel- 0 s lent beverage, b m o but because 6 , use h si fan ke P y o s recommend 1. S n t,t101 it fax fo invalids an g y d persons with weak Constitutions. Its an constituent elements are the "Dublin" r 1- malt, the sense as that used by the world-famous brewer, Guinness, and pure spring water. This water is kept in ea a beautiful reservoir on their adjacent of grounds. It is the purest in Canada, as s. shown by obemieai analysis, and is em - played in the manufacture of all the n firm's output. It produces during 24 s_ hours 60,000 gallons of water', and is thus al kept in a perennial state of purity and coolness. The Carling's ales and lager are also e .famousthroughout Canada on account s of their superior quality, purity and e, delicacy of flavor, being produced from the very best quality of barley and hops. ,As a result there has been a great falling re off of the imported articles in these lines a in recent years, as Canadians are quick e to recognize the merits of an article of o home production when the quality meets - their approval. Their exhitht at the Western Fair this year is a model of *artistic arrangement. It is pyramidal in shape, 12 feet in dia- meter, and 25 feet high. Fifteen hundred bottles of their ales, Kiger, porters, eta., s are employed in its construction, lnak- t ing it one of the most striking features of the exhibit, and one showing the en- - terprise and push which characterize all e the actions of the company. As an evidence of the popularity of a- their goods it may be further stated that they were granted special diplomats and medals at the World's Fair in Chicago fax the general excellence of their goods, by as well as at every other eel:I:,loon of importance where their goods wt re dis. played. g What Guinness and Bass are to Great Britain, or Pabst to the United States, Carling is to Canada, and it is safe to predict that in the future as in the past this company will occupy the foremost place in this line of manufactures in Canada. An Xray protogrnph was offered a evidence in the Haynes murder trial a 'Watertown, N.Y. The anniversary of the battle of Tra faigar was celebrated throughout th British Empire At Duluth, Minn., the customs inspe for refused to allow 28 Italians from Canada to land. Mrs. Lily Langtry benefits to the ex tent of three hundred pounds yearly the death of her husband. The .Abyssinians are de en state Somaliland and camnutting horrible atrocities upon the prisoners, Six officers and 100 men of rhe British forces were killed or wounded in the storming of the Dargai ridge. The peace commissioners have adopted eight article of the permanent treaty of pease betwen Greene and Turkey. The Spanish Cabinet is said to be divided as to the attitude 1t should as- sume towards the United States. Three miners were buried under a massive landslide at the Cleveland Lake mine, Mich. One of them was killed. A capias for the arrest of George F. Steel, of Michigan, has been issued, the result of the failure of Steel's father. It is stated that the Spanish Cabinet is divided as to the attitude it should assume towards the United States. President Ritchie, of the British Board of Trade, suggests a compromise that may settle the strike of the engineers. Mr. Ritchie, President of the British Board of Trade, suggests a compromise that may settle the strike of the engineers. A family have reached Hudson, N.Y.. having travelled from Port Angles, a distance of 6,525 miles, since March,1894. Elmore Chambers was captured at Lapeer, Mich, for leaving Canada with goods on which there was a chattel mort- gage The university authorities at Ann Arbor have consented to allow Prof. Mortimer Coley to help take the Yenta to Detroit. There was a sudden influx into Lon- don during the past week, and most of the large residences are now open for the winter season. The British engineers claim to have woe the fight for an eight-hour day, and therefore decline to allow that - point to be arbitrated upon. The Madrid papers say that the reply of the Spanish Government to the United States declines mediation of any kind in the Cuban question. Lient. Winston Churchill, son of Lady Randolph Churchill, ' is acting as war correspondent for the, London Daily. Telegraph in India. A new Servian Cabinet has been formed under the Premiership of Dr. Wladan Georgevitoh, until recently Ser- vian Minister at Constantinople. Recent despatches report a devastating cyclone in the Philippine Islands, which, in addition to the destruction of much property, killed .four hundred persons, Both Japan and Russia are said to be fortifying positions in Corea. It is thought that a conflict will take place between the two powers in the near fu- ture. The commission appointed to enquire into the disaster of the I3odynsky plain, in Mbescow, in May, 1896, report tbaton that occasion fourteen hundred and twenty-nine lives were lost. It is again asserted that Lord Salis- bury will shortly ', resign, and that the struggle for the Premiership will be be- tween the Duke of Devonshire and Mr. Arthur. Balfour, and that the latter .wi11 have all Mr. Chamberlain's influence. Domestic Carves. "Pusher is furious." "What's the matter?" "He was arrested on suspicion of be- ing a .sooroher." 'Well—isn't he." 'No; that's a baby -buggy stoop he wears." STATE of O110, CITY OF TOLEDO, ss Lt;cis Couxri. FaANlt J CHIENEY makes oath teat he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. CHENEY & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo. County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the suis of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of 714Ti,'s CATFRAKAi NPIKI -VE. 1 C:HENEY, Sworn to before me and supe •t.R,r0 in my presence, this 6th day of December; 1.D.1896. {SEAL } A. W. GLEASON . Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Curtis taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials free: F. J. C,HENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. SVSold by druggists, 750. . Gratitude. Mr. Skinflint (to stranger who has saved hint from drowning)—My dear, good friend I'll never forget you as son as I live! Come up to my shop and get some nice, clean, dry clothes. I'll let you, have them as cheap as anybody.—Lon- don Fun. slow to Cure headache.—Some people suffer untold misery dray afterday with Headache. There is rest neither day or night uutil the nerves are all unstraug. The cause is generally a disordered stom- ach, and a cure can be effected 'by using Parmelee's.'Vegetable Pills, . containing Mandrake and Dandelion. Mr. Finlay' Werk, Lysander, P. Q.,,writes: •'I find Parmelee's Pills a first-class article for Bilious Headache.' • Short on Polish. See -he puts bis best foot foremost— For the other ons-alack-- Wears a shoe that in his hurry He bas quite forgot to black. There is nothing equal to Mother Graves' Warne alxtermivator for destroy- ing worms. No article of its kind •has given such satisfaction. Re Was Practicing. Smith—Is young Flyingwedge practic- ing law?. Williams—I think not. He was called to the bar, but I think he's practicing economy.—Illustrated Bits. Holloway's Corn Cure is the medicine to remove all. kinds of corns and warts, and only costs she small sum of twenty- five cents. A Wifely Opinion. "I watched my husband playing golf yesterday." "Well, what did you think of him?" "I thought if he had to take that •much exercise athome fornae or the obIldren what a row he would make." • let•O••••••••••••••••OM••O••••••OON•••••••O••40041, • ▪ 'iR fill n B'"' ',■v' ��) ;tv`.' kye ' F 0 �, vMyc• p� ..y;- 'stti'is' ,® �'s`ri' � `kv�:�' rl, �� ,� wz mtit# 'S ,�', �' ,p Everyone Who Makes Three or More Words From the ;Jet Below (lets a ao� , m Prize ; . $100.00' for a Complete Correct diet. Read our Offer Carefully. 3 •• The Following Sixteen Words Each Have Dashes Where Letters Should. Ap- o pear. Tho Proper Letters in These Spaces Make Complete Words Which We • Wave Chas a A nsitreri ) n - the lies ri ti rI • g'C p o Accompanying Each Word.. GAN YOU 00 DO IT ? at de Mere Are theWord dsie s. Can You Solve Therm .• >a� • 1. A. ER.C. The Lost country In the World. 2 2. T -13A-9. A finned used by many men, 2 �i. —EA -TY r 3. )P -'Used In laundries. Something n man admires In s woman. • •5. -I-HT Something Fitzsimmons world do for money, • 6a. 4ari•E_ YICT-.---Thoughtmoroo1bytbiedEng- llehnobiltty than byAmericnn Tvorkmen. : 7. C- - - --M.g A feast day inchurc''ihes,nter celebrated in 2 8, C -TT.. Raised in Texas and other Southern States, 2 6s - - 0-R-hl'i,-R 410.-QL - p'ip son often employed by a news- Somethirig apersou is{ab 1 le to get in Alaska. Z11- C -1.-M-93 A.great discoverer, • 12 -- --NC^B'Pfy A system of writing used in offices. 13.-OL.AR- Something every man likes to have plenty of. • N. - -0-1(A seaport town on the Atlantic Coast. • 15. W -T -H Something nearly ly every one wears. • 16. B.Y,E Name of a great publisher in Chicago. • O• exlpeteatiorh—l3:ach dash ap- pesrins in th. partially spelled Z wordy indicates the absence of a certain letter, and wit •n thePro- perletters are supplied the A, original, word we bays selected to form each riddle will befound 0. vein plate. 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Every person making oeso iocho veroesnsdntions will receive canmedgldwatEy prosending 12 or more oorraeted words, according to conditions, will receive a 20 year gold filled watch. llverpanehaving 3..or m o re c orre c t word s a eeor dinb to conditions alisracetvoAlandsom 7raeent0fourcele ton of the Andeattomopd aCatfpin ors dele ant cluster ringof rubyor emerald stones,said luted earths, brooch,;Wokpin Or watch charm. We guaranteeatistactionwith the presents wasend. • Remember these presents are free brit no list will bo considered ,, . �5. le syn l are 2ee suu for b to Boyce's Monthly. We therefore require you onerear's subscription to our monthly, When you a � send in your list DO NOT SEND ANSWERS WITHOUT subscription, as spelt answers will receive ao. attention and cannot possibly win even if • correct, 'Wrapp silver eeelrely in paper before enclosing it lu envelope to prevent loss bymail. HOW CAN {r'i,E DO THIS? • • 111•r :, •, • • BOYCE BUILDING 112.114 Dearborn St Chicago, e We have undertaken to builds tremendous circulation in a short •' t !@l time. Our aim is to get a million actual subseribere, and eclipse any • month's' nitblioation in Ole world, We want to do this in a few weeks Instead of waiting wears, and to do this requires money and lots of htta- tla. The greatest difficulty in getting sni,sgrlb<rs is toget them a After they bare read the fad 4n:ittu • sten and started. Y' pears C p ni it L 111 p 1 a C Illustrated O m t.thl they Y 1 su subscriptions. not o. without it anry d it o no : trouble to get them M renew their subseriptioas. We know that ordi- nary methods will only produce ordinary results and an ordinary paper. �' Hence e make extraordinary, offers Dan eexphec t to hareem extraordinary subscription list. 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The gasoline is taken- from a tan.(which may Area • �i .,�. be located at a distance from and NO '>Uk ;>i "�ti +�'�Ra�4�Rl'i - •:r' "' ' below the engine) by a simple pump and forced into a "- ; which is kept hot by the chamber, ~ �� - d By this system we secure a perfect vaporizing of the fluid which i>s: mixed with air before entering the cylinder and a low grade of gasoline may be used—in fact, almost a kerosene. 4 • ADVANTAGES. OVER STEAM- The first cost Is less than the cost of installing a steam plantof equal capacity. p 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. For all Power Purposes SIMPLEST, STRONGEST, STEADTFST, MOST ECONOMICAL THE OLIN GAS ENGINE MAY BE PLACED ANYWHERE IN YOUR SHOP. IIl' - IRREQUIRRES VERY LITTLE FLOOR SPACE. WHAT USERS SAY OLIN GAS ENGINE Co., Buffalo, N. Y. SHEP,IiTJR$E, N. Y", NOT. 24th, 1896. Gentlemen :-My engine worlr. fine ; better and better each dtav I run it. I start it in the morning and do eat sloe until 8:00 or 8:30 est night. I like the engine first rate. To -day I have been miming the 20 -inch bit `s'ens. rho iron mill the cob and corn crusher and the 'el elevator, ' e t a, ,ll l at the same tir�t;, grinding- caro, cob and grain, and then I changed and left off rhe corn crusher and put on the speller in its place, and all worked well. But 1 cant keep up 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 ? t Now using a 5 horse power gasoline engine. F. A. COLWELL LAFARGE'VILLE, NOV. 28th, 1896. 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 expected 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 verypotverful 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. Je oME, SOLE AGENTS FOR Toronto Type Foundry Co., Ltd., Send for Descriptive Circular and Price List. TO R 0 N TO. TEE OLIN GAS +'ITGINE Co.. Buffalo, N. Y, it is estimated that American trav- ellers annually spend $100,000,000 in Europe. AGENTS (' j�j'j'(� FOR SIX FAST -SELLING 11 lij I� j J I•Iousehold Articles. Send pos. tal for particulars. ROBIN• SON -&PARSONS, Toronto. 6-136 • T. N. 13. 189 TO TAKE YOUR LACE AS a useful, progressive, prosperous and successful citizen, by taking a thorough Business or Shorthand Course at THE NORTHERN BUSINESS COLLEGE, OW EN. SOUND, ONT. Writs for Announcement to C. A. FLEMIAG, WW1 A GLANCE AT THE• HANDY will show 15 aam at ` useful kitchen article. Ageeits, male or .female, ellfng an make 85 per day it. Secure your territory before itis too late. Enclose 10e for sample and full particulars. A, Swanson, Fort Itrie, Oat. IN US& §'i