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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1886-6-24, Page 3;N- 'S How To Ventilate a Horne. We is the amnion of the year when many bourn are la course of coustruotion, and the following euggestione reapeoting the vtntilation of henna may be found metal :— In the oenitruotlen of a dwelling, °teen• tion should be given to amplerovision for the adequate supply of fresh and pure air, n It should be recollected that each person re- quiree not less than forty to sixty oubio feet of pure, froth air per minute, ort 400 to 3,600 oubio feet per hour. To aeoure this amount of air reggirei for each person am opening not lees than one-sixth of a icuaro foot in area, and absolute safety meanies A still larger area. Some fresh air will bud its way in through oraoke, between Mildew. cob, under and around doors, and even through brick wails ; but this is an num r- tain• and inadequate enpply, and openings should be provided at oonvenient places for this purpose. ' If provie for the proper ventllathn of a house ie a at thetln time its construe- 4 involved veryllE� , le expense need be involved ; horse the importance of giving this matter attention when planning a dwelling, The following le a brief summery of the prince plea of correct ventilation, which ought to be familiar to every one, whether intermit ed in house -building or not ;- 1, For effielent ventilation of each room in a building, two openings are nem:imary, one for entrance of fresh air, and one for egrets of foul air. 2 When the f rah air enters a room wet m, as when furnaoea are used f:Ir haat. ing, Lilo foul air opening aheuld ne at the bottom, as the oldest air in the room, an cone( quently the moot ;impure, will be tbat which has been in the room the longest, and has been gradually pooled by contact with outside walla and a indow eurfaco9, When a Loom is healed by 'Coves, the foal air opening should be near the ceiling. The size of openings depends upun the number of persons to oe supplied with air. It may be laid down as a general rule that an opening of twenty-four square inches' span in both inlet and outlet is required for each individual in a room. The openirgs should be of euffeient elze to allow a pee. saga of at ieaat three thousand oubio feet of air per hour without creating too peroepti. blu drafts. Air cannot travel through a room more rapidly than five feet a seocn i without a °eremites being perceptible. A sick -room needs two or three times the or- dinary amount of ventilation. The fou) -air openings of rooms should connect with heated ventilating thefts. Cold air shafts are uncertain ventilator's. They are not to be relied upon. The amount of draft in the shaft depends upon the height of the shaft and the amount of heat in it, Varione methods of heating the ventilating shaft may be adopted. In a building heated by steam, steam•pipee may be employed. In ordinary dwellings, egenethe waste heat of smoke -pipes or chimneys may be utilized for the purpose. An oil - stove or a gee -jet may be used for heating small shafts in dwellings ; or a small stove may be need to accomplish the same pur- pose in lainerphafts. 5. Room on different stories should not open into the same ventilattug shaft, ae the upper reome are likely, under various oir- oumatanees, to receive the foul air from the rooms below. In constructing a dwelling-houee with referenoe to health in the matter of heating and ventilation, we know of no better plan than to provide an improved form of fur- naoe as a means of Supplying warm, pure air, and a grate for every room or unite of rooms ae a means of ventilation. In very cold weather, the draft in open grates will be sufficiently strong to secure ample venti- lation, if'theea are in inside walls, even without heat .•; but in spring and fall, a little fire will often be needed to create a draft in the grate floe. An Undertaker's Experiences. " I've jest returned from the h nue of a young married man who died last night," amid an uadortaker, " and his weeping wife told me she wanted his ocffiu made large enough to hold his gen and game bag, because he was so fond of shooting," " I suppose you have a great many such queer requests,'' remarked a lfetener. " Oh, yes, It was only about a month ago that a mother, frenzied with grief, when I was about to put the lid on her daughter's casket took from a closet a satin ball dress and insisted upon having it used as a cover for the corpse. " Then some people want favorite books, lettere, Bibles, pictures, and such thinge buried with their dead. It eeeme to Boothe their anguish to some degree, and you have to humor them. The queerest thing of the kind happened to me just after I want into the business, It would have been laughed at on a minstrel stage, but in a house of grief had to be tolerated with solemnity. The 10 year-old boy of a poor woman had died of fever, and I was ergaged to bury him, Her neighbors bad all gathered down stairs. I wont ap to ask her if there was anything more I could do, and she handed me e little bundle; saying, ' Please put this %t the foot of Johnny's coffin. They are a pair of his old pantaloons, and the first I ever whipped him in.", A Ehlrmaker and a Natnra)iat. Shoemakers have always made good na• turaliete, The latest inetence reported of a shoemaker devoting himself with euooese to scientific: pursuits 000ure in Holstein. In the little`Holatein village of Segeberg there lives a plain octogenarian shoemaker called Honelaoh who for a great number of years has, Ce following the gentle craft, dovot- ed hilt f' to the study and collection of bootleg, He has gathered together no fewer ,than 2,563 different Linde of beetles, 1,390 being native and 1,773 foreign, The whole collection is reported to be well preserved, and to be Edientifioallghamed and classified, ite value being from a scientific point of view very great. Not only does shoemaker Honelaoh possess a unique' acquaintance with the habit of beetles, but he can boast a familiarity with the biologioai circumstances of Holinein beetles which for. one in hie humble condi- tion is regarded as almost incredible Ento- mologists of foreign oountriee, who desire information reapocting the beetles of Slim - wick -Holstein, have only to go to the elan pie shoemaker of Sege berg in order to learn all that is known. Though 80 years old Honelaoh is said to boas devoted as ever to his favorite studies, and to be constantly adding to his extensive collections. Consternation filled every breast in Shanty. town when the Loft -fielder of the aeoond nine shouted from the enclosure where the ball had been battered "Yer'll have ter' call dor game, telly's. Finnerty's pig has swal- lowed the ball 1" " Don't you know now many three times tends ? Now, Harry," /laid the teaoher, "if one loaf of bread Dost ton cents, wouldn't throe post thirty cents 7'' "Ma bo no at your bakery ; but we deal with a baker that gives throe tar a quarter," DEAD AND THERE, A Carson City Indian, whose squaw would sot give him money wltn which to play poker, kuled himself by eating wild pax. .nips. What ie said to be, the largeet schooner ;a the world will soon' by launohod at Bath. She will have a coal carrying capacity of 2,600 tong, The Philadelgphia Preis is anti:M.4 for the statement that in a oyolone in Ohio "the boundary liner of several townships were beat all out of shape." Petty has beoome soarce and high since the regent glass -breaking etorme in the Wert, Oao druggist in Illinois has sold 600 pounds within a few days. An entire family of negroee were found dead ip their cabin near Yorktown the ether lay. Without doubt they were killed by ightning during a heavy thunder storm that period over two days before. Asou p liar. Parisian fashion whioh hear grown rapidly within the past few years is the custom for women too bareheaded out of doors, The oap once worn by the labor. Ing woman is now seldom seen. George Holyland, of Fork, Mi., was shearing a sheep the other day, when the animal kicked and drove one of the blades of the sharp shears into George's abdomen, infiioting a wound from whioh he Boon died. "Mosquitoes have seldom been thicker in Virginia than this epring," nye the IVliiford Chronicle, and it goes en to tell ef an ewe that was literally bled to death the other night, the pasta attacking its udder,which was distended with milk. Streator, Ill•, has a oat that delighte in killing 'snakier; but she nearly met her match the other day when she tackled a big garter snake. It oeiled about her body, and the two rolled around on the ground until the teeth and claws of the cat get her the viotory, A derky did a big business selling eggs in Osborne the other day, at 60 Dents a do- zen. He was able to sell a good many at this figure by offering, as an Inauoement to buy, the privilege to the buyer of throwing them at his head thrust through a hole in a can- vas, The -ten-year old Nancy Taylor of Grant, Iowa, reads with the book upside down, and writes with inverted characters, beginning at the right; side of paper or elate. She says that everything within three feet of her eyea seems upside down. At a greater die - tame her sight is normal. C. C. West, of Butler, Ga., went fishing two weeks ago, and wore an old vest. After getting home he hung it up. On Wednesday Mrs. West was feeling in the pockets for a matoh when a rattlesnake two feet long dropped from the torn lining. It must have got there the day Mr. Went went fishing. A been was burned in R fokingham, Vt., not long ago, and a valuable horse was 'sup- posed to have been burned too ; bat the other day he was found in the possession of a milkman of a neighboring town, who had pat his own old horse in the barn, etolen the good horse, and set fire to the building to conceal the theft. A Kingston family moved from their house a month ago, and recently, the little girl of the family and her mother went to oall on the lady who occupied the house they vacated. While there the ohild saw a very email baby that had arrived but a few days before. She looked at it oarefully, and then said : " Mamma, we moved to soon : we'd have got that baby if we had stayed here," Mr. A. H. Dayton of Springfield, Ohio, bought a chicken—so-called-for a reoent Sunday dinner. The ooek dressed it, and found within three ihelless eggs. They were put into the frying pan along with,the fowl, ar d in a moment there were three separate explosions like pistol shots, each egg was violently dashed against the ceiling, and. the cook was badly burned. It le suggested- that uggestedthat the hen had been feeding en dynamite, Four years ago John Twombly went from Mein°to Orange City, Fla„ arriving there with seven dollars in his pocket, He set up a peanut stand, and in six months added fruit and cigars to his stock, Within a year tobacco, candy, and cider, and a few grocer- ies were added. Oat of this bueinees John has paid several hundred., dellare for old debte, bought,a lot in a good looality, and on it built one of the beet buildings in the town. Mrs, Goilemame, with her three children, hag just made the journey from Hamburg to San Jeee, Cil, While they weiejonrneying through Nebraska one of the little ones fell from the oar window when the train was at fall speed. The train was stopped after some delay, and the frantio mother and others hurried baok to pick up the mangled remains. They found the youngster quite. unhurt, playing with pebbles alongside of the track. For sixteen teen- years Margaret Jacobson, known asCrazy Maggie," has lived In a shanty in nioago. Her only companions were doge, and she subsisted by begging. One day last week she was arrested as in- sane. Ste resisted the policemen, and when overcome Ineleted that there was money in her shanty. There was, In a satchel was $661 in silver change; in stockings were gold and greenbacks. Over $1,000 was found, and they are looking for more. The lost ring story ocmee to hand as usual. This time the scene is laid in Ken- tucky, where five years ago William Howe Moorefield lost hie sister's ring while fiehing in a pond. Not long ago he went shooting bull frogs in the same' pond, and while out. ting off the hind lege of a big one that he had shot, what should he see protruding from the balletou w rad in the aide of the victim but his sister's long -loot ring, with the identifying ineoription still quite leg ibis. Policeman O'Donnellof Clev Cal d attempt• ed to arrest Andrew Zeeoh, a saloon keeper, In whose plane a lot of bis countrymen were making a disturbance. The gong pitched on the polioeman, who. attemete 1 to draw his revolver, One of hieacsa+taate grabbed it, and it looked bad for O'Donnell. Jnet then Charley Harris, a bootblack, rushed In, enatohed the revolver, levelled it and yelled : "1'11 shoot the first bloke what lays a band on de cop 1" The crowd fell bank and tho policeman took'neeoh to the lookup. Careful of His Health. "See hero," said the bartender to a stranger who was making sad havoo at the free lunch counter, " aint you going to buy anything to drink 7" "Nap, .I goose not," replied the stranger, with his month full of cold slaw' and pickled boots. " It was only this morning I was reading in the paper that liquor affeote the coating of the etomaoh and eventually destroys one's appetite. I don't propose to get dyspepsia settled on me, if I oan help it. He (after surveying the company); "Mix. ed lot 1 Hardly a gentleman in the room 1" She (innocently) : Not ono—that I can moo 1" THE LIME KILN OLU,B, When Samuel Shin had struck the Wan - et gle and returrod to hie peat en the garr etaire, Brother Gardner arose Grid said ; "I take pleasure in Informix'' die meet! dot de R. Honorable Jumbo Smith, of We Vargigny, am in de aunty room, He a one heat lar` nite by de dirt road on b way to Canady, an' pt my alrneet solloita shun he remained ober to address ne, D 4ubj'ok of hid address am : ' Ceolenee—de Causes an' Carel.' De oommittee will brio him in," The Reception Committe retired to the ante.reom and appeared with the Sion Jumbo. He proved to be a dark.ekione gentleman, built on the prinoiple of a cargo —a good deal the heaviedt at the top H seemed to be somewhat unnerved at ei3b of the brilliant assemblage, but after drink crag a glees of ibatee'he brand ap and too the platform and began ; " My friends, I has Oben de enbjiok velem' a great deal of thought'an itndy It has bin de aim of de past fo'ty y'ars o my life to dlekiver what oaneed an' who would cure 'am, Deir seems to be a grea deal of ignorance 'mong oull'd people ae t oyolonee. Do you reckon de pyramids, e Egypt have anythin' to do wid 'em 2., If so you am sadly mistaken, [Agitation begin the stove ] I have met oull'd men who con neoted Cain an' AMA an' cyclones altol.ether en' dey wouldn't give in to no argyment If dein am any among you to -eight, an' emcee deir am, who believe dat Noah's ar eber had onythin' to do wid cyclones. Yo am off yer base," [Agitation all ever t hall.] "My friends," continued the orator afte gulping down more water, "do you 'spas it took three thousand ya're to make di world. If der am any etoh in din hall to night let hia, stan' fo'th. Wheneber T mee a oullu'd man who says die world amgwine t egad ap bete de ya'r 1900, I sot him dow ae a pueson who would steal a $2 bill cute per vest pocket if he had de chance. [Cheer and applause,] How many pneeene in di hall tonight am pasted on de Drift Period When did she begin to drift ? Whar' did eh drift to? [Suppressed emotion,] Som pueson° will tell you dat die world was i darknees fur fo' hundred ye're arter it wa made. Doan' you believe it 1 Day wasn' der, West would be de use of all dat dark nese? What would be de good of it 7' "How about cyclones?' called a voice. " Yee, rah ; I wee comm' to dat. In th fust place, what am a cyclone ? If der' am any pueson in die hall tonight, an' I'epos der' am, who thinks a cyclone an' a zephy am one an' de same thing he has lived hi life in vain. Dcy ain't any mo' alike dan an old bole tailed dog am like a new planer [Slight evidences of amazement. ] "In de fast place, a cyclone has got t have a start. If it didn't get a start 1 would fool aroun' in some pastur' or ewam until nuffin was left of it, What eber sot de air in sadden moshun may rot a oyolon goin', It am a leetle feller at fast, an' i it doan' hit a barn or a side -hill it gather strength an' momemtnm an' becomes vehicle of destruokshnn. Bawer' how you sot a current of air in moshun, eepeohually if de day be sultry. No oull'd man has any mo' right to fall off hie wood shed, an' thu precipitate a cyolone, dan he has to walk Into a bank en' lay his hand on de money der' exposed. 'Spoeen your mule Blips d halter an' runs outer de stable ? He sot a current ef air in moshun, If you run arte .him rot anoder current goin'. What am d result? A cyclone a weep ober a hull county an' death an' destruckehun foliar in it wake. [Sighs and groans,] If a ouli'd man should enter de watermelyon patch of a white man and the white man should find him der', a current of air would be sot in moshun. If any cnll'd pueson should so fur forget hi'eelf as to be found in or about an - oder man's hen -roost at an oneeaeonable hour of de eavenin', de same result would feller. • I has no sorter doubt dat many oyolonee has bin sot in moshun in die manner." [Cheers.] The orator removed his collar, took an- other drink, and continued : " If day am any pressen in dim hall to. night, an' I 'epoee der' am, who would will- ingly start a cyclone to parry hie own selllth rade, dat pitmen kin not be removed from die onfeelin' world any too soon. He am a human fiend. [Great applause.] Sartin white men have Monied my theory regard - in' de origin of dere destructive wind storms, but dey have fa led to disprove 'em, Rid- icule am de weapon of de man widont proofs. [Great uneasiness in the violnity of the stove,] lenoonolushun I beg rto thank you fur your kind ettenehan. I have no conneok- shun wid de signal novice or de Conoord School of Philosophy. I grasp de situashun all by myself, an' when I has once got hold I neber let go. I am now on my way to Canady to collect a debt 17 y'ars old from my uncle, an' to make some scientific obeer- washune on de lateral movement of eide- hills. I expeok to return in a few weeks, an' shall then be in poseesehun of a new leotur on airthgnakee, which I hope to do- liever in die hall," The orator retired amidst great and con. tinned applause, and Whalebone Hawker moved that the thanks of the club be tender- ed him, The Rev. Penstock honed that the motion would not prevail. The Dyclone arguments that had been advanoed were an insult to the intelligence of the club, Pickles Smith didn't want to do the Hon. Jumbo or any other man an inj aetioe, bat he felt compelled to say that the stranger was off hie base, He hoped the olub would not indorse any such theories, Waydown Babes had wrestled with the oyclone problem ever since one of 'em came along ani oarrled his mother and mule aotose two counties, and it struck him that the Hon, Jumbo was soientifioally correct. He believed in counter-irritante and count- er -currents, and shculd try several expert - manta before going to bed that night. Shindig Watkins, Parson Davis, Trustee PuI Itch and o ;hers dlaouesed the matter pro and con, and the President finally ret. tled it by saying " We (will neither indorse him nor deolar' him a lunatic. De best way in all such oases am to strike de happy medium. by takin' up a oolleckehun of fifty Dents far his benefit an' praiein' his flow of language. Let us now beadjearned.' No Highfalutin' About Little Brother. " I wonder why 1 can't make my kite fly?' wailed the little brother of the High Soho girl. " It looks to me," replied Mildred, as though its caudal appendage were dfepropore Umtata to its uuperfioial area." " I don't think that's it," said Jim ; "I think ite tail is too' light," A. wedding Present Of practioal importance would bo a bottle of the only euro -pop corn ore—Putnam'° Pain- less Corn Extractor—which can be had at any drug store. A continuation of the honey moon and the removal of corns both assured by its stile. Beware of imitations, AN AUSTRIAN MURDER. Brutal grime by an Old Wotnala'q, House. Keeper. Another daring, murder was committed early on a recent T'nesday morning in Vienna, the victim being a women reamed Merle Braer, nearly eigntyfour years: of age, who lived in ber own hone° with au old ser- vant, and had very little intercourse with;. the outride world, She was a retired shop. keeper, and had a fortune of aboutg8,000, part of whioh rhe kept in an iron safe in her room, which she had not left for eevoral menthe. She was also so euepiolone of robbers that she would not open her door to any but relatives, and evea these' were sometimes refused` admittance by her c'lfidedd`- and housekeeper, Frau Stookhammer, Oa` ,Cher• day morning before nine o'clock the home - keeper left, ae she nye, for ohuroh. Soon after a relative of .Freer Bauer name, and having nnenooeufully knocked at the cider, aroused the potter's wife and a leokomith living in the hone, who opened the door. Oa entering they found the old woman lying half-dreeeed on the fhernear the safe, whieb was open. Her skull was fractured, apparently with a hatohet, the right ear being out off, and; her cheek terribly gashed. Near her wag found a loaded etiok stained with blood. The police were immediately galled in, and had jest commenced their investigation when the housekeeper returned, and professed to be amazed at the sight,. protesting that she had just been owning from ahuroh, It transpired, however, that rhe had been with her children, who were in reduced oiroumatances, and had paid her rent, which was just due, and bought them new cloths, toren Stockhammer was arrested, and Frau B.Iner taken to the hospital in a dying state. ' F•raa►m Creased troaeers are fashionable amorg the ewalla. Now, if they will only put the seal of approval en baggy knees, they can °cunt us in with them. Mother's Smiles are the Sunlight of .Moine. There would be fewer clouds and brighter sunshine in many householde if every dis- pirited suffering woman realized what a boon Dr. Pierce's "Favorite Preeoription" is for all weaknesses and maladies to which her rex is liable. No lady who gives this wonderful remedy a trial will be disap- pointed by the result. It not only ane promptly upon all functional derangements, but by its rare nervine and tonic properties strengthens and repairs the whole feminine system, Price rednoed to one dollar. By druggiete, It outrivals all—Dr. Sage'a Catarrh R imedy, Husband, (impatiently to wife,)—" I told you I only wanted half a cup of tea, and, as usual, you've filled It to the top. Dont you know what half full Is?' Mother•in- law, (grimly,)—" She ought to by teie time." Florida, " The Land of Flowers," is a paradise for the invalid, and the " Fountain of Youth" was once thought to be hid in one of its forest glades. It is now the haven of many consumptives, who fad benefit in her genial warmth and fragrant flowers. The consumptive invalid need not necessarily go so far from home and 1rlends to get relief. For if not in the last stage of the disease, Dr. R. V. Pierce's " Golden Medical Discovery" will restore to perfect health. For all chronic throat, branchial and lung diseases it is a most re• liable epseific, By druggists. Forty rods make one rood, but one red will often make one oivIl, especially in the can of the email boy. Don't use any more nauseous rnrgativee such as Pills, Salts, &o., when you can get in ;Dr. Carson's Stomach Bitters, a medicine that moves the Bowels gently, cleansing all im our. ities frorn the system and rendering the Blood pure and cool. Great Spring Medicine 50 eta. Why is a baldheaded man like a grey- hound? Because he makes a little hair go a great way. sma+e.IMENNOs. e.P 2S5 1%,f o—THRn6—mil two ladles—as Canvassers 11 L good pay. H. E. KeNxanv, Toronto. Oat. CARRIAGE LORRIES FOR CARTERS, wholesale houses, manufacturers; first prise Central Fairs. Address M. D. Ennio-as, Maaufao• turer, Hamilton. Ct UPS RI JR FILES AND RASPS—WARRANTED C't equal to beet Imported : all kindle of re -cutting. Galt File Worke, FRearRlca PARKIN, Galt P.O. ID UMBER STAMP with your name, only 25ote ; marks linen, prints cards. etc., 2000 styles. Agents waisted; olroulere free. MODEL RUBBER STAMP CO., Balto, Md. EPRE3ENTATIVE in each county to sell "Pro - poral and 1£apoueal "—a book on Love, Court- ship, Matrimony and kindred themes. Write for circulars. International Book and Bible House, Toronto, Ont. 5COMIC TRANSPARENT CARDS, 10 OTS. ; kr 30 Gold Fringe and Imported Embo•eed Ohromo Cards, 15 ole, ; or 50 Fanny Chrome Oarde, 15 ate. Send silver. No two alike. Name in orna- mental eorlpt. Agents wanted. Sample book with oath 25o. order. Excelsior Card Co., Cedar Dale, Ont. $700 80 Acre Farm -5500 co Acre Fa►m i� 5 U 1 mile from Dundalk -100.000 aaaing playa, 15 cents ; 100.000 5 cent mnelo ; inettumente half prloe. BUTLAND, 57 King-st. W., Toronto. BAND SAW MAOHINE3—ALL SIZES—LATEST improvements; bracket band saws for attach. ing to poets; neat, cheap and durable ; . Bend for circulars. JOHN GiLLIES 8t 00.. Carleton Place, Ont. .GENTS WANTED—IN EVERY TOWN AND County, for the 0. K. Parer and Slicer. Beet thing out ; Bells at eight sample K"ite Bent on receipt of price, 15a. Q El DAY Agent, 40 Yooge St„ Toronto, Ont. AGENTS FOR NEW PARALLEL FAMILY BIBLES—large type, splendid maps, beautiful 1tratione; contains 4,000 questions and en,were on Bible Tooke ; liberal terme. International Book and Mole House, Toronto, Ont. SPECIAL NOTICE.— GRAND INDUCEMENTS offered to young Ladies and Gentlemen during May. Shorthand, Bookkeeping, Commercial Bur lneee, Englleh, ellassfoai or Mathematical courses, separate or all together, at half the regular tuition fee. Ad. dress Immediately, Tim TORONTO Bosoms OOLLaaa, Toronto, Ont. MAN OR A WOMAN WANTED IN EVERY township, to sell Dr. Talmage's now book, "Live Coals:" The keenest and moet vlgorone epecimon of oratory ever written ; nearly 700 pages ; only $2; Cull particulars of this and other new books Paas. Schuyler Smith & Go., Publishers, London, Ont .�GENTS 1—YOU CAN'T FIND A BOOK THAT , gives bettor eatelefaetton or that you can make money faster with than " World', Wonders." Salle to all elaeeee—dbristiane and Infidels, datholtce and Proteetante, old and young ; old agents who have not canvassed for, years are going into the field with it; 0, P. Jonklne sold 124 the final) week ; J. E Brace save : "Tho first week with " Wonders" netted mo one hundred and elxtoen dollars." A good ohanoo for Unemployed persons ;• ontflt free to actual can. milers; write for torma. BaADLI&Y, GARRRTeoN d; Co., Brantford. SPECIAL ATTENTION.—BBWARE et unreli- able educational advertiaemente and do not spend your time and money for nothing. Bengough'e Shorthand and Business Institute le old and firmly established, employingg only toeoh.ere who are pram. tidal end ertperfenordinevery department. Positions scoured graauatoe without extra charge, Write for particulate. Taos. BRtcaouen. President, 0. H. Damien, Booretery.,° 0 CIIOOL Teachers it Students Attention I L Daring Hdliciye "i speeial course of private lesoone, by higbeie mariete, *lit be given School Toaohors and Students, en Shorthand Drawing dr Painting. Ail whin can should 504,0. !'lend lmereda ately for menial OW0111are Teen HMO* ShoaT. n*NDt te' AmADitty, Armin 'Toronto.: WATER $20 leer Day. WELL BO1ftI11TG mono superior 1 20 feet per bout ; hand or borne Pewee; combined boring and rook drilling maohtne; grand.0000ae; deet prizes and diplomat. Aendfor catalogue, IN/teary et.. HRmUroa, Canada. ASRiAGE & WAGON AXLES. lienufecturen of the Celebrated • Apeher uRrrPII AXLE WORKS —MWD,- rn,pvryirc•. T. PEP, 'ER & 00., Guelph, Ont. Our Duplex Axles are all to be had at all the prinolpel HaNdwate Storer in the Dominion. L WIrON, LA.YZ & 117O.. GAM Axle and Machine Screw Works, Carrs ag^e and Wagon Axles, iron and Steel 8.1 and Cap Borews. eta. UM on application. New ' Road W 0rlean s Out Coll GE.Agordmil, Winters' Patent Road Carl, Buggies, Carriages, Sleighs, &e. end for Catalogue. J. WINTERS, Manager. Galt. Ont. FF.DIVER C ELECTRO &STEREOTYPERS. TORONTO. Send for Catalogue. TENTS, FLAGs, HAMMOCKS, AND CAMPING GOODS. Macnair's 169 YONGE ST„ r Toronto. ME very enqulry'oheerf ally answered, MONEY TO LEND --ON-- Productive Town, Village & Farm Property. D.1111rCIIELL McDONALII, Barrister. 6 Paton Block— 'Toronto Street Toronto. Hand Files. R. SPENCE & CO., Consumers will find It to their advantage to ask the trade for our make of Files and Raepe. Be -Cutting a Specialty. Send for price list and terms. Hamilton, - Ontario. B RAN ® I.'_ RD COLD WATER RICE STAROB NEVER FAILS. CONSJPTION. /have a positive remedy for the above disease ; by Its use thousands of cases of the worst kind and along standing. have been cured. Indeed, so strong la my faith In its efficacy, that 1 wit fiend TWO BOTTLES FREE, together With a VALUABLE TREATISE on tide disease to any sufferer. Give express and P. 0. ndrlrese. DR. T. A. SLOCUM, Branch Office, 37 Yonge St., Toronto PLACER KN,VES riTAV,c ()CITES STAVE Jo nter cheese box, veneer, leather eplttng bookb ndere, moulding, tenoning, and other machine knives of beet quality, manufactured by Pima HAY, Galt Machine Knife Works, Galt, Ont. ; send for prloe liet. J.L.J ONES WOOD ENGRAVER • 10 KING STEAST • TORONTO . DAIRY SALT. Finast brands of Englleh Dairy Salt, in gnailer sacks. Hivgine' Eureka, W.shfogton Brand, Worth- ioghon, also the Celebrated Ashton and loading brands of Canadian Dairy' Salt. Butter Workers, do. Send for Price List. JeSIES PARR air SON, Toronto. The Royal Manufacturing Company, 6 Perth St.. Guelph. Ont. L. 0. WIDE•MAN & CO., —HANUPACTURBRS OP— Improved Family and Laundry Mangler And all kinds of Laundry Appliances, Burglar. Proof Wfndaw•Sash Looks, Step Ladders, etc., etc. Model.Making,'Mi11-Wrlghtlna and Carpentering Work. 2rSEND FOR PRICE LIST.', A ants Wanted. .SNOW DRIFT Tklt R IEC N0 , � A �I K N GP aW DR BETTF$ •. `. The finny Drut Bakinp!yoirder Co., ltraglrfo:e, 08 GUELPH CARPET WORKS. Jdr As AR•f ST'EONry, p G di CO taxmen -min or Wool, IIgttost surd murttsn CARPETS, of new patterns and deem Guelph, ]heat. BaIZY•.aiad.Carriage Gears. I'AVORI THE '“Dit'iIANC This gear supplies the demand of die Driving Pub. do for l,w miming buggies, and combines with this 1100 105e. ease of motion, great strength and dura- bility. Prfoee very meditate. 'Wheels tired without Dcuole Flange Steel The, wear fully four time, al lone at tboee with ordinary lire sleet Seed for met deeorlptive circular, .11 B. ARMSTRONG M'1'y Co., (Ld.). Guelph, Canada. ELM. CITY HARNESS OIL ' THE NiOS T SUPERB OG IN THE FStS DE - WORLD BASED ON NEATSFOOT OIL. SOLD BY ALL HARNESS DEALERS. mx._®MEIlOii'3"7CIEV3r. 500 Engines, Boilers, Iron, Wood, and miseel an; eoae maohiaea for sale. For particulars addrees H. W. PETRIE, Brantford, Ont ICUREFITS! When I ray cure Ido not mean merely to stop them fors time and then have them return again. l mean a radical cure. I have made the dieeoae of. PITS, EPILEPSY orFALL- IN0 SICKNESSa life-long study, I warrant my remedy to cure tho worst cases. Because others have failed 1a no reason for not now receiving a cure. Send at once for a treatise and a Free Bottle of my infallible remedy, Give Express and Post Oflicu, It coats you nothing for a trial, and I will cure you, Address DR. H. G. ROOT, Branch 01110, 37 You St., Toronto. Automatic Swing 86 Hammock Chair' THIS CHAIR Is the beet and cheapest ever (leered to the public tor solid comfort and rest, and differs from all othere brine a Chair, Swing and Hammock combined. Price $3.00. Agents wanted. Manufactured only by C J. DANIELS aft CO., 161 River btreet, Toronto.• Allan, Line ltoyal Mail Steamships. Balling during winter from Portland every Thurs- day and Halifax every Saturday Liverpool, and In summer from Quebec every Saturday to Liverpool, calling at Londonderry to land mails and paeeengere for Scotland and, Ireland ; also from Baltimore, via Halifax and St, 7ohn'e, N.F., to Liverpool fortnightly during stammer months. The steamers of the Glae. gow lines Ball during winter to and from Halifax. Portland, Boston and Philadelphia ; and during sum. mer between Glasgow and Montreal weakly ; Glae•- gow andmBooe on weekly, and Glasgow and Philadel is For freight, passage. or other information apply t0 A. Schumacher & Go., Baltimm e ; S. Cunard & Co., Halifax ; Shea & Oe„ St. John's, N.F. ; Wm. Thome. son Sc. Co„ St. John, N. B, ; Allen & Co., Chicago 1 Lovo & Alden. New York ; H. Bonnier, 'Toronto; Allan, Rae & Go., Quebec ; Wm. Brookle, hhtLdel. phis ; H. A. Allen, Portland, Boston, Montreal. fARMid* SP ° MTs TAI P TO I� eALL,AWAy leo KING ST-WE.ST To RPNTO FOR FULt_5...... Mention This'Pa,per. STEEL WOVEN WIRE FENCING, A Revolution in Fencing. No Barbs, No Shade, No waste Land CANNOT BE TORN DOWN OB DBOKEN BY SNOW DRIFrs 0$ ANIMALS. f----/ � ,i,}'•`d�l�'I __ ..t .i'= mow: "•t�"i'.�` �.-: r.!' i,sh, -''. •\� �t••� �1.'.`,v-.Y e'€-^�`� �;���...�`L"��'� -�•�s$ sit.=�®�''°" ak. U �4=a4. -��•� -.1 � L..'li . a .- ..a� ,. .sP' �w v+Dsi s'�i�i Th B oat accurately represents onr fence, It has from 15 to 25 Steel Wires woven together with Strong Selvage Wire Cables. Wo make It frcm 24 to 14 in hes high. and sell it from 55o to 80c per rod. You can get a Lawn or Garden fence at ore -quarter to one-tenth usual mice, end a form Penne that will ,fast is lite -time, aneaper than ever botore heard of. Strength, Beauty, Durability, and Economy 'eom- bined. Ask your dealer for It or address for particulars the ONTARIO WIRE FENCING COMPANY, PICTON, ONTARIO. Li D. SAWYER & 00. HAMILTON OHT rttaoratrrsalia or- " L. D. S.' ENGINE £wardad F1387 TRILL,ink at Provincial Tait, Landau! Cantle] Rile, Hamilton, and 1liortiara 1Mty Iraashtor. "Grain Saver" and Peerless" SEPARATORS, a'1Htts'" ]Horse-?owere, for d 441.13 red 11f1 Horses. ?read ?movers. ler la *and 3 Horses. LO LS 3eparsters, far Trend and Reseal, P, ewers. OIL Brad tOr tllsbratd4 lad OutalOano ]hied List