Essex Free Press (Essex, ON), July 30, 1897, page 3

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ttwreaa.^Hflst liUtorv' o tha a? ^ri^-^rVpubliihM,, ttno only !^?^*5 W ?B*Mijoaty^ Bales a4rfcooo>TvtbB/bottoiii out Of ftU" ri Mooplng In ponoy. . Bran lj;HXMi;^fMg commission, or *^M*s!;WhiW;:;!. ': ftJHX^AjRftarsoircOii i/to.,. Toronto, Oat, M m ^%p3^|es*ra N - -v' :4 ^ ?|Cottod Root Compound ont^y medicine on which dies can depend hi the four and t%M of,need* :\; ofiwengthv P^^K^;f;6r ordinary esses SfMr;w twitdbllitf niedlclne known W 4wiggi|ita; one Dollar per box. 1038'ifo*> ipeclat owes xo degree* two boxe, Five Dollars. WMiwW**i *4W P< rcceiptof iic attd two 3-cent aUmpifl. ^.^^ &^W-' Windsor. Ontario, RBoldtn E])is6x and ovorywUore in Canada. *;bysH rsBDonalMe Dructtfat. " *, JMfcde from Gretpes m^1^^ drown'In Essex County. |^ioh,^weet and Wbolesome ! ....;.t..Per Case of Twolvo Bottloo.......... p;'::.;80c. per G-allon..... fy^PflllverotfFroe at Railway Rtatlon or Bxprosn gS&:The Amherstburg Vintage Co,, 1-4 AiaBK*crucifi, ONT. '--*-*> ; JQwdlMt and kc<i ]Ca^ ;,&twtr$^j(^ Boripfcion oj Yaa* "^niB ltd be cme of the most profl^ble breeds of sheep to be ;foiuid;*#^er^;^ of the Welsh mountain sheep nvs judge they would be exceedinglyprofitable in the United ! States, especially among that too large claw of farmers who ore careleis with their live stock. The Welsh aheep i :p^idularly.hardy;and wouljfl fit in well on poor and rooky lands with Bciint herbage. The Englishwriter de scribes these sheep thus: ' In size they are small medium, II Would take a very good early lamb to weigh 40 pounds .in October: Some 3 handled lately were under 80 pounds, butihey were very Bmttll ;and very;late ones. Tho great oauso of the small size in these sheep-is in premature brooding.' It is quite common to Bee rams running with and serving lambs not much over 6 months old. The Welsh sheep farmer is nothing if he is not keen and anxious to multiply his stock. They coat him scarcely any- thing. He has a free mountain range going with his farm. - . He clips a great part of his, flock twice a. year, and he fa-'.:' tyitfn .), fii'J , ,Jtough and rendered...... ....Delivoi'ed at the Essex Imperial Soap Works ,..'...B. 'sLOTB;'Prop. mw SiAMUEt-DEAN, flm CUAMINQ OF CHININEW ?||; : And Remove NlOH'V BOIIj, Mi- On BbOET Notioe, First Claw, Clfeau Work *-- ' " uaraateed. Add reus Box 204, HaaoX. , 1, T..... ..fr. Positively cured by these .-TI^JlbQnUe^.Dbt^&oni Dyspeprfa, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. , A per- I feet remedy for1. pi?ziness;, JIauaca, DrowsX. ticssf Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongno Pain m the Side; TORPI0.XJI7^:..,;-;.The^ Regulate the Bowels.' Purely Vegetable* Qmdll PHI. Small Dose. 8mall Price. Substitution the fraud of tho day. See you get Carter's, Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand Carter's.Little Liver Pills. WINDOW- BLINB A.way down. CHINAWARE, BRK>A.-BRAOE, 5TANOV GOODS, NOVELTIES, BOOKB AND STATIONERY, SCHOOL SUPPLIES, - TOYS OF ALL KINDS, BERLIN WOOL aud riNaBUlNG . YARNS. . fe/A/ew Stock of Late Wall Paper ffi#>;. "'. I Baker and- Butcher. WW'!f'rfXEUBoldest baaineflfl in town, KatabllBbe " ,J.t 1878. Flrat-olftafl broad n.nrt oakoa ot al Wnflfl. We^cllng caUofl a. ajiaolallty. Grooonefl Wrf- '.. . proWsionB.'flonr.food, aalt and pork. Oonloo 3i*,'fv;"'. tioary,croohory(laBBwato. CannedfrnttBnod; . veaetaWeaof all UintlB. GooAfl promptly i*j ,,... . 1 vowdtoallvartflOitiliq lowu . J. M. IIlOKK f,j,*[,il ' . . ' A.NTKD SKVKnAT, KAt^nvUti MEN OR f,:M Pjg;/ ' * Women to travel * >r roapbueiblo , ontftt fcvcfv" "' lillhod hcUBe in Ontario 3&-W' '-.,'. i " ff'iTi' Salary, $760,payable' SlStrookly and expeusoo. Position permanent. ' Reference. EiicIobo Boir-otddrqBBotl stampod on- veleop. Tho Natioaal. Star Duliaiug, OhiottBO- The Coast Une to MMKINAG * forty., Ki MACKItSlAC --DETROIT' PETOSKEY CHICAGO |> New Steel Passenger Steamers WELBD MOUNTAIN LAUBft. sells hlB lamba-attt-vory low price befow wintor sets in, bo as to have no trouble ahout winter icop and care of tho flock. I have aeon fair, lambs of this brood sold in the November fairs at 0 and 7 shil- Hngfl each.'($1.60 to $1.76), and.the farmors cbusidpr tlieinEClvcs fairly well paid for rearing them if they oiui Bell thorn for thoso prices. Ai* to the typor hero nrei a couplo, Mothers at 10 months old sometimes, no wonder they run small and produce only one young utatimb. Inhabit these sheep aro quiet-.and give littlo'trouble, bat thoy love to be: on tho tops of the mountains in flno weather. There U money in theao nheep as lambs for mar ket, if any of myroaderfl want an open ing. Surely if Welsh mutton in Londpa Is Worth 8 pence or 0 ponoo (10 to 18 cents)"per pound, and if lambs at 2B pounds cau lie bought for 6 or 7 shillings, thero Ih monoy in them: Welsh, ahccr< farmers do notgot.it nptthoy. It-goee into several pockots on its way to the family tabic of tho town consumer., The meat, as the farmors thomsclvca Itnow it aud oat it fresh off tho xnou'n- , tains, is delioious. Thero is no other mutton liko it, aud I think for invalidH1 faro and for easy digestion it is tho ten- 'dorosfc' and sweetost of flesh food I know of. The lambHwill not fatton to any ad vantage, Thoy want a few weeks'* good keep, and thou to bo killed arid oaten during the.>early, wintor months. Oi course the moat is nearly all lean. Ii . fntthoro be, it is inside tho animal, and not mlacod np with its flosh. Let mo de pict what, come .anxious1 "looker out*' may liko.to know of a small farmstead,, with a plain and sombtimes badly built 'oottago on it, attached to 10 or 20 aoreH of poorish pasture and arable land in some out of the way valley that is rent ed at 10 flhillingH an aero houso, farm stead and . all rand that has "With ,its teuanoy a right on tho mountains to free sheep pasturago for, say, t, 000 sheep, fluoh farms aro quite common in both "North and South Wains.. XXorrio Xlfindrt. The illustration hero givpn if* copied irom a quaint and interesting Gorman book called the "Guido. to a Knowl edge of the Kxterior of tho Horse," The writor divids horRow according to the .(lhapeof tholr headfl into th root classes Wanted A AT A M-TOBELLUANA.DAGHOWTH iVl A.T* Vrtjlt anl Ornumuntnl Trora SlvtubK. 1Uj8", Bulba ami Bulboun Plauts.Gru ik Vluoa, Small Pmita, Soed Potntooa, *'to. W<- oatalopu only tho bardfoBt and moBtnopnlor varletloti tbntaaooood in t-bu oolduot olimutos New Boa8rm uow commencing j aoiailoto outflf frao, salary and oxpetians paM from start to) full tluiQ, or lttxiral oowmieaion lor part time- Apply miw, addreBfliog nearest office, and cboloe o[ territory, LUKK,BUOTHKKR 0OB1PAKY, International NuranrloB, ;. OrtlOAOO, ILIj.. or UONTaWAIi.Qutt. THE CATBIRDS PLIGHT. The Oreatest Perfection yet attained in *toat Constrwcttoft~tUiirlous Equlnment, Artistic Purnlshbiff. OecorPtlnn nd lHlc- ' ,l' int ^rvlce.inBiiriiie tlie Mfth&n <1*%ki> <ti COMFORT/SPEED AND SAFETY' : ' wt'^'v: ffi-i*'h ;',' "the sao>'. marouext_^ W<:\.".". , ittij"J '. ?-OW JiATEStoPlctureaiiao Maclclnucari' W&y<><y. Hdliirn, including riealsaad tiprttas, pror^ Bfn-'iV" CttVelKndj $i8f. from Toledo, SiSJhxwr- y.|.J'. , If $13.50. DAY AND NlQHt 6EBVI0E. Between Detroit and Cleveland '* : Earliest' P#'4Wi*' trains forall points Bast, South *ud South- 6^-';/,.'. , '!:.:west and at Detroit &r all points North and ffeV/^rtbwet.'^T;'v'>;;.;' W^V^I*"Wt^(if JUBtV"Jttl August and 8tft. Onlr, 'Ben'd". for Hlustrkted Pamphlet, Address :. ttAWte' HEAD, '.HAW ltAM's HEADEND STRAIGHT IIUAn. the straight head, the ram's hoa^tiaud tlie half ram's head. In those rthree classes tho enjjfro equine raco is iuolndod. " The writer prooeeds' tfcb tell us that &!$ ram headed type id found today tn it* highest' perfeotion1 nraaao; the .variaw equine 'families, of Spain and Holsteiu, among-'c^rtiuii strains <rf. blood in th horsos of Anstria and in Italy. ' Belonging Ao the half ram^headtypC;: We have- 'the Norman, Bejfcer, Buiiainji . fluid Polish horses. .j. > What tlie author designatei as the 110- blfistbloodfid of all thb; honsea of tlw. orient are marked by too straighti head. A straight pTofiloin a, ^owe iB.tberefow. liko a Greek profile in a human being/h mark ctf high birth wad ariatocraoy, XTorty Birds to the Keione How It Was Finally Bet Free. "Going through the woods ono day," said a lover of birds, "I saw a catbird with one of itB wings caught on a brier bush. There was a clump 0? briers here, with a narrow opening at ono place between two of the bushes, Tho Outbird had tried to fly through that opening and had madp a miscalculation aud got one of its wings impaled on a thorn. 'Xbe other wing wofl free, and ft-was flapping that aud trying to got clear of the bush. "Around this tush there must have been at least 40 other birds, of ono kind or another, oatbirdn and brown thrash ers aud wrens and grass chippies, and bo on, that hud been attracted by the -unfortunate catbird's cries audita ef forts to escape, and that appeared to bayo.gathored thore to holp it. They fluttered ubout close to "tho bush, flying around at a great rate and making a lot if noise, bnt not really doing anything. Some of the smaller birds'would fly" around very close to tho bush or even fly under it, and I imagine some of the bigger birds saying to some of theso veutnreRomo little follows, 'Here, you brown thrasher, you, Why don't you get Dudov him there mid push on his wing?' But the brown.' tliraahor would only go about so close. He-waHu't going to get caught. What the birds would have dono finally I don't know, 1 think thoy would have helped tho catbird in houio way, bat I undertook to holp it mysolf. "Of course I couldn't go right up ^o it, for that would have frightened it, and may bo. made it hurt itself oven Worse., I bad with moa sawed off broom stick that I carried for n walking stick, and I undertook"to free the oatbird With that, "i thrust tho stick through the brlor buah, all the other 40 bird* look ing on, and brought the end of it gen tly against the catbird's wing and push ed tho, wing off tho thom. But in start ing away tho catbird got the wing caught; again on .another thorn. That Was bad, and I stood off a minute de liberating aboutwhat to dp noxt, the whole flook, of birds Btill fluttering round' and the imprisoned oatbird now protty nearly oxhaxisfcid. It was a time to drop all ceromonyi and 1; simply walkod up to tho bunh and took tho cat bird off tho thorn with my handa. ' "Just beyond the brior bushes thore . was a smooth grassy spot in tho woods and I lain tho catbird down there, the wholo lot of birds that had been hover ing -about tho brier .-bash:, following along, nioro or lews near, and hanging around there. Pretty soon the catbird got up and flew to^a little tree nearby. It wasn't strong, but it oould fly and its wings wore all right. When it flew np into the tree, all tho other birds flow away. From the tree tho oatbird sang its thanks to mo, and tberp I loft it. *' New 6rk Suni,- '. ,.......,..-,.,..- .. ..-iv,*.,.. ynis Cow With Vniwusil M*rkln^ JToi %[ -u Hblfltbin-Fri08iftn -!oovMo^:*he picture wo find r tliat the {white triangle in tho,forehead whioh ^characterizes this breed of cattle has Iprend all over the faoe and head. In 1 pthcr words; her head: arid face re white, with obly her dainty eare black. A family of Holitoin-Fricsians spread This ie ;an advertisement which tells the. truth, about (Milburn!s Heart 'and Nerve Pill*. '. -'IV , PEOPJ.E WHO SUFFER '.' from sleeplessness, dizziness, shortness., of -breath smothering: fieeling,, pal pita- " - -^/thsn -bf'/tbe. hiB^'rt,':.:^"1""""'"'"' 'pa^\'throWh;X^e breast; '. ,an cf.heirti anxious, inprhld'cmn-. "ditido of the.miitd,, .groundless; Xfe^j'&t\')Gpriib&t dafiger, anaamia ^bir -irajSOverlshqd, aftpr reffeiptfi.;;/tff;'ijft "tgf^^'gWWtt; ^.ebility,-;: $<&.%{$?: of -breath, WHITB HOtaTHIN-FEIESIAN. through the eastern a totes have snuob more white than block in their color ings. One famous bull in Now Jersey is almost white, with some bluish spots upon him. These white. Holsteins are excellent. dairy oattle. Itwlll bo observed hat tho lively oalf beside its mother has hoi markings to a dot and is also nearly white with black ears. -- This cow is owned in New Hamp- shire. She is'a famous prize winner. She proved the great dairy qualities of the white Holstein-Friesians by making 17 pounds %% ounces of butter when sho was only 3 years old* Dad Buttar Color, There is a common misapprehension as to tho nature of this natural butter color. It is supposed that it is a fixed quality of tho butter and is not subject to change by any process of tho buttor makingr My experience differs from this common belief, for I have found ii to be very far from a fast oolor, as might be said, and very easily changed by exposure to light, as well as by the action of the salt, due doubtless to the effect of tho chlorine of the salt, this chlorine being a well known, most ef fective blvaohing agent and destructive to almost all colors. Thus when tho but ter 1b made, if it bo exposed to tho light, the outer surface of it may be changed somewhat and in the working it will become mottled or streaky unless great care is taken to mix it well. Even then tho light streaks will bo apparent if the. butter is examined by a microscope, and the mass will have a streaked or marbled or patchy appearance. This defect of ' course arouses suspicion' of tho charac ter of the butter, for if it is not wholly and completely perfect in every way it is open to thin questionable character nil through. And thus it is that tho color of buttor is rightly one of its chief points of excellence. - Sometimes .impurity in tho salt will make the butter spotty, this disfiguring being the offect-of lime in the salt,.and this is a common impurity iu the cheap kinds of. salt, Tho limo in an It, of oourgp, will exist mostly us a chloride, and this wTll have tho very worst effect on tho butter, bleaching it in patches or streaks and giving a loapy texturo or flavor to it. Sometimes thero is gypsum in tho salt, rud this has, as I have found, the erfcat ot making round spots in tho mass'of butter wherover there is n speck of this sulphate*of lime."Tliere cannot bo too' grout care taken to procure the purest kind of salt for dairy ubc and It should be ground as flno as flour, so that If any imparity does exist in it it may -bo evenlysproad through the buttor and thus the color escape injury. Hard wa ter, too, is uot fit for washing tho buttor on account of the impurities in it being mostly limo or gypsum,'both of which, ufl said, are injurious to the butter color. As the buttor is. a mixture of oils and limo has a bad effect on all oily substances, making an insoluble soap of the combination between them, not only tho saltt but the water, should bo perfectly froo from this impurity, and hard water is to bo avoided in the dairy work. Doubtless some of tho/putobincss of butter is due to t'ho water uBed in washing it It is not difficult, to got rid of the patchy appearance of tho butter, by working,'if it is cautiously dono. No amount of direct prepuro will injure the toxtnro of'the buttor).. It is the draw ing of tho ladleoyer the Wtter so as to spoil the granular texture" by which the injury, is done. The more buttor is pressed by the ladle or tho rollor of tho butter Worker tho finer; will be the grain, the drier tho butter will be and the more even . the color. It is a good plan to pross out tho butter at tho first working and leave it in thin leaves, ajs it/woro, then Bprinkle tho finely ground salt,, as ,flr]o as flobry ^Venlyoyer the wholo^. surface arid leave it sp-fortne- salt to,work through the' mass by soiu-, tion and ahsorptiony and in ' 12 hours to turn these leaves together and then work: out the exoess: - of. moiBture, .or .'any,. patdijy, marbled color, by frequent fold- ihg. and pressing, "avoiding the least " drawing; of acroas :any eurfaoe. Of course as tho. butter isdraihedi* is continually freed from the liquid (whfoh should bo clear '(brine;: -^i'tljadt : ;,by ^iwurJlhg^'it :'OnT:.;'.,JThriJB' the finiahed; ' . ^rongh; thB;maav and the co)or wilj. bo :"the:'-Bfl;rii4idp^ United Btntea dairy departmeny: aayo mf v'";fii&' w mvsssjcv *iprr;..,:;v>:.' ' . ."I" BuiSrh y:m*n .And flow .,B*f,....... My lbv'n dark sys sWns like) t*f When tba *ide dy has flsd. ' . -."' Brians'blesalnn m my hsd. Tho itar, thai disUnMUdo, is wise To snrlnk lroro rlvwi^f tby srei. flUr. lore, ana sbAtss tba atari -^r.X. Boston In ^TheQumins Bm.1' '. IHEIE DEAMif Fife. THE AMERICAN RIFLEMEN AT THE BATTLE OF NEW ORLEANS. A D'edcri|)tIon of tho Kn;as;ein>nt i>y Gn *arc: *furt:srtn A Liittor From "OUT lllok- ory" Ilo\v I'acliuuhain's Veterans Ware Defeated by Froutlersmsu. . In The Century'William Hugh Rob erta baa ah article entitled "Napoleon's Tnterest In the Battle of New Orleans." In this isquotod a.hitherto unpublished letter written by General Jaokson to Mr. James Monroe. A portion of the letter follows; There was a very heavy fog on tho river that morning, nnd Lbo British had formed and were moving bofore I knew it. The disposition of the riflemen was rery almple. They wore told off in Nos. 1 and 2. No. 1 was to fixe first, then itep back and let No. 3 shoot wbfle he leldadod.. About tiOO yards from the rifle men there vvos a groat drainage canal running back from the Mississippi river to the swamp in the rear of the tilled land on which we were operating. Along this canal the British formed, under the fire of the few artillery pieces I had near enoogh to them to get their range. Bat the inntnnt I saw thorn I said to Ooffeo,. whom I direoted to hurry to his line, which was to be first attacked: "By------, wo havo got them! Thoy are ours I" Coffee daahed forward, and, rid ing'along I)in line, called out, "Don't shoot till yon can see thoir belt buckles!'* The British Wore formod in mass, well closed up, and about two companies front. The British, thus formed, moved on at a quick step, without firing a shot, to Within 100 yards of the kneeling rifle men, who wero holding their fire till thoy could sbo tho belt buckles of thoir enemies The British advance was exe cuted as though thoy had been on pa rade. They marched shoulder to shoul der, with the step of veterans, as thoy were. J^t 10Q. yards distanco from our line the order was g^ivon: "Extend ool- um4 front! Double quick, march! Ohargel" With bayonets at the charge, they came on us at a run. X own it was an anxious moment' I well know the charging, column was made up of tho picked troops of the British army, Thoy had been trained by the duke himself, were commanded by: faU brotherTin-law and had auQcessfnlly bold off the ablest of Napoleon's marshals in' the: Spanish campaign. My riflemen had novej sgen suah uh attack, nor n'acTtbey avor before fought white men. The morning, too, was dump.. Their pow/der might not. burn well. "God help nal" Lmutterod, watohing tho raplJly advancing Hue. Seventy, 60, 60, finally 40 yards, wore they from the silent kneeling riflemen. All of my.mon that I could see was their long rifles rested on the logs before tibem. They obpyed their orders well. Not a shot was fired until the redcoats were within 40 yards. I heard Coffee's voice as he. roared out; "Now, nieii, aim for tho ceutor pf the cross bolts! Fire!" A second after the order u crackling, blading flush ran all aloug: onr line. Tho, smoke hung so heavily in the misty morning air that I, oould not see what bad happened, I called Tom Overton and Abner Duncan of my,staff, and we galloped toward GoflWs line. In a fow seconds after the first fire thoro onrno anothor shurp, ringing volley. As I came within 150 yards of Ooffea the smoke lifted enough for mo to make out what was happening. ,' Tho British were falling baok in a confused, disorderly mass, and tho en tire, first ranks of their column were blown'away. For 200 yards in our front tho ground Wascovercd with a.mass of writhing, wounded,, doad ancl dying red coats. By tho time the rifles were wipod the British line was: feforraed, and on it came again. This time t^iey were led by General Pakonham in poreon. gal lantly mounted and riding us though he was on parade. Just bofore he got within range of Coffee's line 1'heard a.single rifle shot from a group of country; oarta wo had been using, about 175 yards dis tant, and a moment thereafter I saw Pakeuham reel and pitch opt of.his sad dle, i have alwayflboliovnd befell from tlib, bullet of a, freoman of' color vfhO^ was a famous rifle snot and' came from' the Atakappas region of Louisiana. The, seoond advance -wasi ;j>reoiee.ly like .the first in its: ending.;;" 1,500 -or: more ' rlfleh^eh^billed! apd wounded SMli-British^ ^irds-of them, liilled:^A^pv/^qpiaXi^' /Wptino^;:!t',;X;;;41d!.^;'J^!0^ >hftve';ifentvW' ^l^/b^^rsiffbia^; . i,i*: ^orp0-v. to-. he1;*n<V'JWo*p$Wu,. ,,, The work ortheld'dhiwarIb knV Kidney/'WUiVafe'SirSSi*^ Doau' belpei .They otire'ttil'k'fdntty tropbles'v?^^^ Chase the nrio:ncid pat oUho sy^pg Mr, JanjcBi.OqaM,|Br.;: weH; l ^' " Eaeex, has tbfa to sty ahont D ney :^^|^ "For.many yeace, 1 have; had^te ' pain aud lamoneBa in my baok'dau^ed,^ doubtedly bj kidney trouble. ^he/(Url| was highly colored,: With :-i::gzeiyfyifa sediment, and X w&e albo afilioV*d,i.:'^Sh* overe nenralgio pains iu my^ ^head^rr-*'^ neag, BloopIoBBrjcBH, fluttering of the h#| shortness of breath, etc../ }?f$f$$)$ "Many anight I was eobad th^ rdarej not lie dowa, aud as a matter of faotX^fS' in a terrible condition, completely woth^ out, and debilitated.',., ' :,:'^Vj/^ji "I commenced the use of Doan's ip4i$R rilla whioh I gob from Mr. Bherrin'a ".dif'S^ store, and can a'ay that' they are a.'-. kidney and heart medicine, as welLasini, excellent tqnio. . /".".', ^i'r.'f^^S&S "I have been getting better..oyer ysincVr Iboan to take them two montbeagoj'- aud to-day have no back or uribaty, troubles. They have also removed allllhT heart troubles from whiah I "Buffored 'aXtd^ I heartily recommend thia valuable bi^afif| oiae as a epeoifio for all forms of kidp^] oompUint."', ""_' ' f:,^S You Can Get One Parlor Suite, Orro-Bedroom Suite, One Extension Table, Ono Sideboard. Six Chairs,. - One Bookor, -ALSO- - .M'W^i IronBeds,Baby .C^rtifig^^M , Ficture Mplflclin^^ Everything in the Furnittire-fiffl Oloae Prioes fcho Best G'boa^ tho Market the/bulk of^:w$k is our owii rnanufaoturoi'Jmgr fore we wiU guarabtee^tthefej in the Market* ,:*'---f*ffi$^ f!f^!i"'^fll Undertaking ft Specialty^ First-Claas CityOHacksjn. atfe6^clai>6 ' ^)^ All of the above to be Had'at : Esaex FurnUure ^ptert;bii J. A. HICKS & Co;, Esse -----------------= ..-yytiM Vr****!", thi v:;:p|li|| ' 'iV/.,ll"'/i ."Jij^..aBU*K mm *if ^^ toys-** '<:-.:- yt'C"--:";,-' . mdm^^y-^r:

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