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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe East Huron Gazette, 1892-07-28, Page 8!rman paper journal of s this world, ons for our ly ! At Iasi v ho would [Id breath waseesese ily see ;_ le heat,j his weer, n hay, i ea, all vilI omen w`ne .nderstand If it goes ong. The buried is rcely gaws ne dan- el slip, a in which over this curtains darkened hes closed, ening till e off than i at least, tat I did it brings vhich in - are cold ling, she my half ng help, shivers " , s at the fief ? ight ! I st drink, stomach give me in a tea- , water ! world ? wase 5. Each a'iy sick. a cold. , and I lust dis. , which at I was o tight erflows pp given. Il eloped ve the going. beauti- r have I go tnated t was �, and early, took ern er ours, d us dded oicest pular ured lents as is rap- ing a with shelf tistio lay ndra som and • a hen t as flew cold here orth ted, all eat. ntle ods had and ime led ere :ncl of ly, tit to al- sh in X A •n al as '• e d- d - ,g 'II is 3 a 1 3 s s, nW ofS Ispntes Red d. ARS OF THE `T3 A.: • Y AT HOME- STEAD. lac _fly Work of the Strikers —The 11 ordered* Fusel'ade from Cannon and wiachester—The Dead and Dying Montt merits, of the Disaster—Incidents of the Dreauiai Day. - It win 'levee lee known definitely who fired the Fest shpt which started the slaugh- ter that ma -'e t4 many homes of mourning in cue maeuanatermg city of Homestead, Pa. The first gun, however, was fired from the Pinkerton large, and is thought to have been discharged by the captain of the gangof men, who was afterward killed. The last moment before the slaughter, the crowd was surging downward against six of the lead- ing mill wer,tcis, who stood with their backs to tl,a 4:u ertons, fairly under the muzzles of the rices, trying to keep the mill men hack from what seemed certain death. Clear as a bel far above the roar of the angry crowd, came the voice of Hugh O'Don- nell, as, hatless and coatless, he tried to check the angry men. " In God's name," he cried, " my good fellows, keep back, don't press down and force them to do murder." It was too l.,te, the appeal was drowned by the sharp report of a Winchester from a man in the bow of the boat. The first ball had hardly left the smoking barrel on its mission of death before it was followed by a sheet of flame from a score of rifles in the Pinkertons' hands. William Foy, who stood at the front with his foot on the gang plank staggered and fell, his blood gushing out. For a moment the crowd was struck dumb by the attack. Only the groans of several wounded men were heard. The echoes of the rifles had hardly reached the neighbor. ing hills ere the crowd replied. Out from the semi -darkness of the morning flashed a wall of fire. The men on the bank, too, had arms and were using them. The leader of the Pinkertons clapped his hand to his breast and fell overboard, sink- ing beneath the waters, while several other Pinkertons staggered back and were carried inside the boat by their comrades. At the first flash of the Pinkertons' rifles many of the crowd took to their heels, but :-lose to the water's edge stood about 200 of the angry men firing their revolvers straight at the Pinkertons. Soon the latter, unable to withstand the firing, retreated into their cabin and fired from under cover as quickly as possible. When the men on shore had emptied their revolvers they retreated up the bank, greeting every shot from their enemies with defiant cheers. The Captured Invaders. In something less than an hour after the defeated and disgusted Pinkerton forces had lowered their colors the victors marshalled their prisoners of war into the yard, just back of the great water tanks. The captured invaders were in a very bad way, physically and mentally, and as they hud- led together on the network of tracks they formed a gruesome spectacle. Their faces were blackened with dirt and powder and stained with blood. Some carried their arms in improvised slings, and many were without shoes. A majority of the men car- ried cheap leather travelling bags and bun- dles of clothing. A double guard of Home- stead men,armed with the Winchesters cap- tured from the barges, encircled the prison- ers, and directly behind the guards was a throng of men,women, and children. Freed from One Danger Only to be Con- fronted With Others. marched on. They did not dare to even glang eyce at ot£ hetheir stern,victorswhite faces andhough gleam - in, the road was rough and their burdens heavy they made no sign. ''Au the intersection of Heiser street and Eighth avenue there is a hill At the foot of the hill and fronting on the_avenue is the big brick hall, mg the top story of whi h is located the headuarters of the strikers. This afternoon the headquarters were clos- ed, but from one of the open windows sprung a pole, from which hung a large American flag. When the column reached the crest of the hill those in the front ranks looked down into a veritable sea of faces. More than a thousand determined looking men and pale -faced, talkative women were mass- ed on either side of the avenue. This throng was at least a quarter of a mile long. For fully an hour these men and women had stood and waited for the captives, and as a natural sequence they were in no pleasant humor. Great clouds of yellow dust herald• ed the adeanee of the column. There was s a moment of perfect silence, as solemn as it was portentiouand mighty cheers follow- ed by a perfect s, war of hisses and cat calls. The lane never faltered. The leaders knew that human gauntlet must be passed, come what would, and decided that the best plan was to proceed with all possible speed. The armed escort met with an ovation, and the first batch of prisoners, who were at the very heels of the rear ranks, managed to escape the attention of the crowd. For the long lice of bleeding men that followed them the conditions were not so pleasent. A tall, handsome woman in a blue calico gown began the trouble by throwing a hand- ful of dust in the eyes of one of the prisoners. The man stopped in his tracks and uttered a groan of agony. "My God, I'm blinded," he moaned. "Serves you right, you dirty cur!" replied his assailant, and she pulled from the pocket of her gown a bit of jagged stone and hurled it with crushing force at the suffering man. The stone struck him in the mouth, and although he was six feet tall and weighed at least 200 pounds he fell face downward on the road. Two of the guards raised him to his feet and led him away. This man was badly hurt, the blood gushing from an ugly wound in bis right cheek and four of his teeth were knocked out. Mere words cannot describe the scene that followed. Despite the pleading of the guards and the protests of a few conservative men, the mob vented its spleen on the dazed and wounded prisoners. Men were knocked down, pounded with clubs and stones, and women spat in their fares and tore their clothing, aneid screams, cheers, and hisses. It was a pei$ect pandemonium. A Pinkerton man's Story. O'Day, one of the captured Pinkertons, said :-"I was employed to come here and guard and watch the Carnegie mill proper- ty," he said. " I had no idea that I was coming here to do any shooting or to be a target for any other rifleman. When we landed at Homestead this morning we had 280 men and 280 Winchesters. We had pro- visions for three months, and we all had with us some clean linen and additional suits of clothes. In fact, I was led to believe that we would have a pleasant time up here There were five or six of our men killed, and at least twenty of them were wounded, but none of them seriously. But, however, no man will ever be able to describe the awful feeling of our men during the day in those barges. It seemed six months of awful misery and distress. " We expected to be shot or to have the boat blown up every minute. I wanted the fellows to surrender early in the morning, but they believed the working people would wear themselves out, and then we would be allowed to land peacefully. They were too long winded for us, and we died several deaths while we were being bombarded. But after all death would have been a relief from the cruel treatment we received after we surrendered and while we were being marched from the barge to the jail. If I was hit once I was hit .500 times. Even little boys stood back and showered rocks at us. The women slapped us- in the face, and nearly every man we passed struck me a sickening blow about the face, head, or neck. I was hardly conscious when I was landsd in this den." O'Day's eyes were both blackened, an ugly gash had been cut in his cheek, and a long scalp wound was bleeding freely. The physicians who were endeavoring to dress the wounds of those who had been hurt the worst, had not yet reached him, and he complained of being weak and sick from the loss of blood. His case was only one of the many of his unfortunate fellows. The Scene of the Tronbl On the south bank of the narrow Monon- gahela River, .eight miles to the southeast of Pittsburgh, is this little town of Home- stead, which the whole world is now watch- ing. There is a level bordering the river, but the great Carnegie works occupy most of this. The town rises from the river upon the terraced and gently sloping hill- sides. The houses are none of them pre- tentious, and most of them are the modest, homes of laborers, both skilled and unskill- ed. Each laborer owns his own house. Each has a little yard about it. Ten years ago Homestead had less than 1.000 inhabi- tants ; now it has over 12,000, of whom 5,500 are directly employed by the Carne- gie mills. These mills with their dozen large and substantial buildings and their huge chim- neys, shadow the whole olt non and mat er arf it. rfom You see at a glance, what direction you approach it, that the Carnegie Steel Association is the cause, the life, the whole of this town, that without it the town would never have existed, that with its closing the town would be deserted. Its 5,500 la rers, with their 'families and the few shopkeepers, policemen, and other employees incident to a municipality, are entirely dependent upon the $80,000 handed out at the little window of the business office to the long line of intelligent and prosperous looking men who have earned it in the Carnegie Mills. Until a few weeks ago this town was a place of honest labor, fruitful in content- mentthefand des bla ii d day and night,iness, efires in the ths furnaces ma- chinery never ceased its roar, and the noise of it filled the whole town under the vast canopy of smoke from the chimneys. Now all the sounds of honest industry have ceas- ed. The great mills have been changed into a fortress ; the bitterness that can only end in bloodshed exists between employers and changed into ttees. he zealfonest rnviolence and has hdg the strike war has its roll blood- shed. Already of killed and wounded. And the battle has only begun. At first the mob devoted its energy to jeering and hooting the captives, but Iong before the outer ramparts of Fort Frick were reached the air was thick with stones hurled by the maddened populace. In their eagerness to do physical damage to the prisoners the rabble lost sight of the fact that hundreds of their own lien were ex- posed, and several of the escorts were struck by the flying missiles, but the general aim of the fast growing crowd was unpleasantly accurate. In the beginning the dazed Pinkertons made no attempt to defend themselves. They did their best to dodge the stones, but even before they reached the outer gate their bodies were literally covered with bruises and wounds. When this awful pageant arrived at the gate directly oppo- site the railway station at Munhall it paus- ed in its journey to allow a freight train to pa -s. This interruption lasted only a few minutes, but it must have seemed an hour ae the prisoners. At last the final car pass- ed, and the journey was resumed. Over the P. V. and C. tracks they stumbled, then down the sloping side of the roadbed into the little gully at the side of the station. At this juncture one of the prisoners drop- ped a big yellow valise from sheer nervous- ness. The mob pounced upon it Itke a pack of hungry wolves. They severed the flimsy lock, and in less time than it takes to de - e riche it the valise was opened and its con- tents scattered in the dust. A big red-faced man picked up a freshly laundered shirt and waved it over his head. Thousands of in- flamed eyes caught a glimpse of the shirt, and then, as if by arrangement, a dozen grips and bundles were wrested from the now thoroughly frightened prisoners. Soon the air was filled with all sorts and conditions of underwear and clothing. This gnique episode tickled the people, and for a ' ime diverted their attention from the pris- bnerst During their brief breathing spell the guards moved closer to their captives, and the gaps in the leng columns were dos- ed up. Just beyond Munshall Station the r oad takes a sudden bend. When theleaders f nrned the bend they were confronted by a veritable wall of noisy, excited humanity. In the front ranks of this new and unexpect- ed obstacle were a group of women armed with brooms and clubs. It looked then as though no human power could prevent a collision. But, thanks to the quick wit of one -of the leaders, the danger was averted, and what bid fair to be a tragedy was trans- ferred ransferred into a comedy. It happened this way : A Woman's Awful Revenge. One woman, who appeared to be the Ieader, raised her broom, and in a shrill voice said ; " Where are the dirty black sheep? Let's h'we them, boys." At this critical juncture the leader shouted in a a voice so loud ;hat it could be heard by all, despite the cin and confusion ; " Why my good woman, we want our shirts laun- dered, and we are going t3 make these tramps do the job at cut rates." This rough ;oke was cheered to the echo, and by good .kick changed the fickle humor of the mob. "Make way for ufl" commanded the - poker, and, strange to ;elate, those in front r4. 9L ei $kiwly and reluctantly, the peoPie wdeel u s net the hi h, w itiewashedt :ce of fi nitatt s riff+ g� I r , ethe-Lea tip ad ce AGR,ICULTUR,AL. The Reapers of"Lee. I know that it is reaping time in all the fields of Lee; I can hear the reapers singing o'er the mead- ows, calling me ; " And wherefore came=you not-, to -day to reap the golden grain ?" But I'll never see the fields of Lee, nor reap with them again, "And wherefore came yon not to -day?" they cry across the wheat ; " And wherefore came you not?" the winds are chinning low and sweet, And far and near sweet sounds I hear from over mount and main ; But I shall not see the fields of Lee, nor reap in them again! " 0, wherefore come you not?" The hand of au- tumn decks the sod ; The world is like a picture where the harvests smile to God; There's yet a late white rose for you in valley and in plain," But I shall not see the fields of Lee, where blooms that rose again! "Ah, wherefore come you not? The doves have left their woodland nests, With the gold of autumn gleaming on their downy, tender breasts, And they are call ng to yon softly, " Come home!" But all their calls are vain : For I shall not hear the birds sing in the fields of Lee again. 0, comrades, cease your crying, as ye reap in fields of Lee ; Ye have there so many reapers, there is never need of mo! 0, doves, leave nc your nests, nor call in ten- der tones aide vain To him who hears, with falling tears, but can not come again ! Reap on, ye men and maids of Lee, for those who sow must reap : And Iam reaping far away, while ye your vig- ils keep; But there is no song upon my lips, nor golden is the grain, And I shall not see the fields of Lee, nor reap with you again ! —[Frank L. Stanton. Transferring Bees. Answering the question "Can I transfer my bees from a box hive in May ?" Dr. Mil- ler says in National Stockman : You can transfer them at any time, but probably the most transferring has been done when fruit trees are in bloom. At that time there is a great deal of honey in the hive, and the less honey in the combs the more easily handled and the less daubing, If you transfer at a time when bees are gathering no honey, there is danger of starting robbing, and a colony just trans- ferred is in a poor shape to defend itself, When working on fruit -bloom the bees are in good condition to mend up their combs rapidly, In many cases it is better to trans- fer about swarming time, following the plan devised by James Heddon. Drive out the old queen, and a majority of the bees into a hiving -box (almost any empty box will do) and move the old hive back a few feet, reversing the entrance, Then put on the old stand a hive filled with frames of foundation, and shake the bees down in front of it. In twenty-one days the worker -brood will be all hatched out in the old hive, and you may then drive out every last ben from it, and add these bees to the others on the old stand. This gives you a rousing colony that ought to store honey if there is any to store. The old combs can be melted up, and if you wish, you can save out straight worker -comb to be fastened in frames and given to swarms. If you want to increase the number of your colonies, a modification of the above plan might suit you still better. Wait until your colony swarms, and, after hiving it, put the swarm on the old stand, re- moving the old hive to a new location. This will make all the field bees from the old hive join the new swarm, and there will be little danger of a second swarm. In ' twenty-one days from the time the swarm issues, transfer the colony from the old hive, letting it remain of course, on the same stand which it has occupied for the last twenty -ore days. One objection to this plan is, that if honey is coming in rapidly, there might be a good deal of it in he way. The strong and the weak alike wither at the touch of fate. -[Carlyle. There is no man so friendless but what he can find a friend sincere IIenough Lytton. totell him disagreeable troths. --[B The rate of progression of a storm is often fifty -miles an hour, and a series has: often been traced in as direct: line from north to� south a distance of 400 mues The average. F tudeptthnndCjea found to 5QQ �slis # ace 'f ;fir_.. two causes why she does not. First, I think it may be safely asserted that Short -horn breeders generally have paid more attention to their feeding and beefing qualities than to a good performance at the milk pail. With this I do not propose to find fault ; it is not the intention of this paper to find fault for the'breeders may have good cause: for- the particular line of breeding which they have followed. Secondly, if there have been competitive tests in this country, not only with other breeds of cattle, but in- dividual records showing what can be done with a Short -horn for a stated -period, such competitive records have not come upder my observation. I give the following, clip. ped from an agricultural paper, as the result of the British Dairy Show of 1890. At this show there were 437 cattle entered -for the competition, and the tests were as follows : Short -horns, 121.1 ; Dutch, 115.5 ; Ayrshire, 98.8 ; Guernsey, 98.1 ; Jersey, 90.8 ; Red Poll, 69.1 ; Dexter Kerries, 68.1. The sec- ond prize-winning Short -horn scored 117.9 points, but had the greatest milk yield of any in one day, viz., 61.3, but being under 3 per cent. in fat ; so you see in Britain, where some of the breeders breed for milk- ing purposes, the Sliort-horn cow can show a good record. At a Farmers' Institute meeting which I attended lately, one gentle- man stated that the best dairy cow was a cross between Short -horns and Ayrshires. To get the best, you will notice it requires a cross with the Short -horn. Now, is it not a fact that public opinion is a fairly safe guide in domestic matters as well as other questions? It is tree that it may and does sometimes err. Well, ' ow is public opinion on this general purl. se cow question ? Although we have in On- tario nearly all the leading breeds of im- proved cattle, and we have had them for many years, what do we fnd? Why, about nine -tenths of the cows kept by the general farmer are Short -horns and their• crosses. Now, you have noticed that the title of this paper was the query, "Is the Short -horn cow the general purpose cow ?" I have endeavored to present some facts and figures with the view of ,answering the question in the affirmative, but will leave it with you to say whether I have done so or not. Is the Shorthorn the General Purpose uow? (Read SbJas. Tolton before the hy Dominion rthorn Breeders' A soc ation. In which breed or in the crosses of what breeds can the general purpose cow be found? is a question that has been many times asked, but, so far as I know, it has not been definitely answered. Neither do I suppose it will be settled for all time by this paper. The cow that is bred for special purposes, such as for beef, either by stall feeding or grazibg, or for dairy pur- poses, has and always will have her ad- rnirers ; but, after all, what the general or average farmer wants is a cow that has to as large extent as possible all these qualities combined. Before endeavorineto answer the ques- tion, it might be proper to try to define briefly what would constitute the general purpose cow. Would it not to as large a degree as possible be the cow that, when judiciously mated, - the produce, if a cow calf, in type should be equal, or superior to the dam, or which, if a steer calf, will be fit for the market in the shortest possible time, making the highest returns for the. feed consumed? Would it not also be the cow which, for the feed consumed, pro- duced the greatest number of pounds of. butter or cheese of the finest quality, and when she has fulfilled her time for breeding and for -dairy purposes, can be turned into beef of the highest quality at the least possible cost? If the line of argument so far is sound, we readily perceive that it would be of no avail to look for -this cow in those breeds which are specially bred for beef purposes ; neither will it be of use to look for her in those breeds which are bred exclueively for the d Now, I persume, it will require but little or no argument to demonstrate that the Short -horn cow will nearly always produce her own type. If bred with the main object of beefing purposes, she takes a prominent and conspicuous stand among the beef cat- tle fed in this country ; and I think the same might be said of every other country where improved breeds of cattle are kept. As an instance, at the late fat stock show held at Guelph all the animals .exhibited - (with the exception of one or two) were Short -horns or grade Short -horns. Again, in early maturity she takes a prominent place among other breeds. A friend of mine last winter fattened a number of yearlings that were two-year-old steers when shipped in June last, and they weighed from 1400 to 1435 -lbs., and heifers of the same age that averaged 1375 lbs., and there are n -any instances of these making from 1100 to 1200 lbs. at that age; and, again, are there any finer specimens of cows, heifers, and calves found in any of the breeds than we see among the Short -horns exhibited at our agricultural exhibitions? Now what is the record ofthe er torn Nothing is difficult ; it is only we who are indolent.—[B. R. Hayden. Abbas Pasha, the new Khedive, has a fad, if we may believe the - chroniclers of Vienna, like most rulers. The young Khedive delights in the companionship of gold fish, and once trained a German carp to come to the top of its tank at his call of " Chirra ! chirra !" The Czar collects post- age stamps. The late Prince Albert Victor, of Wales, had a room full of cigarette boxes. The young King of Spain collects mischief, and the Prince of Monaco strands from the ropes with which gentlemen who do not beat the bank adjust themselves to the trees of Monte Carlo. F. Simpson, Esq., Fruit Merchant, 713 Yonge street, says: I was a sufferer from rheumatism. My physician recommended St. Leon Water, it has cured me. I have recommended it to several of my friends, it has cured them. I would not be without it. "Send in your orders. St Leon is all- powerful to remove those life.destroying poisons. No such word as fail in our dic- tionary." Palace at Springs opens June 15. M. A. Thomas, Manager. Woman's Paradise is in the interior of Sumatra. A law exists under which a man's property cannot be inherited by his chil- dren, but must go to his parents, while that belonging to his wife descends to the off- spring. Of course, the men evade that law by putting all their wealth into the hands of the women. "WARNHNG," ask your Druggist for GIB- BONS' TOOTHACHE GUM, take no substitute. A.P. 6I5. "How are you?" "Nicely, Thank You." "Thank Who?" "Why the inventor o i Which cored Iia of CONSUMPTION," Give thanks for its discovery. That it does not make you sick when you take it. Give thanks. That it is three times as efficacious as the old-fashioned cod liver oil. Give thanks. That it is such a wonder- ful flesh producer. . Give thanks. Thatit is the best remedy for Consumptiofa,Scrofulct, bronchitis, )# csiing Dis- eases, Coughs and Colds. Be sure you get the genuine in Salmon color wrapper; sold by all Druggists, at roc. and $r.00. SCOTT & BOWNE. Belleville. The High Testimony Of hundreds of druggists affords convincing proof of the great merit of Nerviline in all painful affections. F. R. Melville, drug- gist, Prescott, writes :-" My customers who have used Nerviline speaks highly of it. I am satisfied it will take a leading place in the market." Thispresses the universal verdict, and if you are suffering from any painful affection,. internal or ex- ternal, give Nerviline a trial and immediate relief will be as certain as the suu • shines. Nerviline is a powerfully penetrating pain remedy. Sold by dealers everywhere. The Bishop of Chester has given express permission for dancing. He finds Biblical authority to be on the side of dancing, and does not see why people should not indulge in it. The palace at Versailles, France, which Louis XIV built, cost £40,000,000. Children Enjoy The pleasant flavor, gentle action - and soothing effects of Syrup of Figs, when in need of a laxative and if the father or mother be costive or bilious the most grati- fying results follow its use, so that it is the best family remedy known and every fam- ly should have a bottle. 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They enrich the blood, restore health's roses to the cheeks and cor- rect all irregularities. BEWARE of %rrrtmoxs. These Pills are sold by all dealers only in boxes bearing our trade mark or will be sent by mail, post ppai__cl, on receipt of price -50 cents a pox or6 for $2.6U. THE DR. WILLIAMS MED. Brockville. Ont.. or Morristovrn. N.Y.. W. McDOWALL DIRECT IMPORTER OF FINE GUNS, RIFLES SHOOTING SUITS,BI NTING BOOTS,ETO. LOADED CARTRIDGES, ARTIFICIAL BIRDS ANS TRAPSA SPECIALTY. 8 King Street East, Toronto Tile Montana Xining, Loan ana- Investment CO. ,, � . eF`�a.�,.�, PAID VP CAPITAL. SI2 000, 00 owns money anywhere in the unite States, ands orMexicl,tiith lAecetsorwyou rits d money, app y - " NENP9 L NAUPT, PsesWcfl ... •UTTL Corn, MoNTAI * Agents Wanted Everywhui LeLAVAL CREAM = SEPARATORS. HAND & STEAM POWER. J. S. CARTERS, - SYRACUSE, N.Y. FAMOUS RENNET EX TRACT Cheese and Butter Color. BABCOCK MILK TESTERS. Sole Agent for Canada, FRANK WILSON Produce Merchant. 33 Peter St.. Montreal Consignments Solicited. WRITE FOR PARTICULARS Of Complete Steam Launchesfrom 20x1 to 34x7 "Acme Coal -oil. Boilers and Engines" from 1 to 8 EL P. Large sizes. Coal or wood fueL "The Marsh Steam Pump" the best boiler feeder in the market. Returns exhaust into feed water heating it from 40 to t0 degreeess,, For catalogue send 3c. stamp. JO8X GILLIES 1t CO., Carleton Place, Ont. SILVER MINES. Canadians have invested in 9-10 of the real esta t of the new towns in Kootenay, while • Americans 9-10 of the mines. The success of- the f the towns depends on the success of the mines. The 1.OUN MEN. Lo be to cute 1!1 N s Neo better trade. Good cutters always in demand at big wages. Special offer, a rare chance. Apply at once for full SCHOOL, par12ticulars. YonTORONTO CUTTINGSt. 4R�11I1+'ICIiL LIMBS J. DOAN & SON. For "Circular Address, -- 77Northcote Ave., Toronto xuz. — CONDITIONS OF HAPPINESS. The first is bodily health. To secure this Drink the IWY.4L DANDELION COFFEE which contains a proportion of German Dande- lion Root, with fine coffee as a basis. It com- bines the Health -giving properties of this well known plant with the refreshing wed dietic" properties E GUof LEY Toronto. Knit only by ELLIS ALL FOR ONE DOLLAR -A 5lanafaci 1rer Offer. We are the largest makers in the Dominion. To advertise the quality and make of our goods we will send to any address by h Sh t I Express, securely packed, ono of our Union cow as a, dairy cow ? I am free to confess silk parasols or . umbrellas, paragon frame, it -may : be difficult to rove that she comes' P or fancy handle, on receipt of $1—a rug- y Pwar b9 umbrella. Tryone. Notetlie address, up to the: quahhcations' laid down in this EA6T'S Jl anuractory. 368 a no Yonge, 5L, r and if so, I think there are: at least" Toreato. Koate nay Xining Investment Co. represent four duly incorporated Silver Min - ng Companies, owning twelve mines in Brit- sh Columbia and two in Montana on the same rich belt, the richest in the world. They afford the safest and most profitable nvestment in Canada. The first issue of stock places investors on the ground floor and is nearly all taken up. The second issue will be 25 per cent. to 50 per cent. higher. Then its - advancement will be rapid owing to greater development work. Now is the opportunity, Don't let it slip. It is not often investors have such a chance as this. Call at office, Boa of Trade Building, Toronto. KOOTEN Y Peerless Axle Grease, most durable grease iv the market. Peerless Hoof Ointment should be in every stable. "RICE AND,wow - TO C608( IT" YOU TRY IT ALSO, Those who have used RICE as directed in our Recipe Book, aro gratefully acknowled- ging the vast improvement on the old careless m ethod of c ooking it, and say it is "SPLEN DID", Write for a Recipe Book, sent free b' th e MOUNT ROYAL MILLINC CO. MONTREAL, BURTON'S ALL HEALING TAR AND GLYCERINE SOAP Is the only reliable and safe Soap to wash your head with, It preserves the hair, makes it grow, keeps the scar . p healthy, Y Beware of Imitations and always ask for BURTON'S; PLAIN F ACTIONTbresh ers Illb8 BELTS1 The Stand and Champion and new Horizontal Champion with perfect water spark arresters are STILL THE LEADERS A. large supply of second-hand En- gines Repaired and Re -built for sale Cheap. WRITE Us PaoNPTLY. EXTRA STANDARD 100 FEET. HEAVY EXTRA 110 " PARA - 120 " Specially Cheap for Cash. Tank Pumps and Suction Hose. WATEROUS BRANTFORD mug GRADE r