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HomeMy WebLinkAboutPN1895_06_21&— •,_ —. i -. . ,C I . i , �dl ME iI I - _ _ „i. ? XIV.I I. , PICKER,IN (ANT. F�,IDA1. JU h; r �� �, . I N � 2X, 1895.:: NO. 3� ti C. a 15 cl���rtal CGar� T r f -- syr Q V 1 /SOT i��i1 TT� Mr. Harris at 7 m. S eclat collection ezOUFFViLLE, i :_ ;: i 1Z (� jJ tJ p p -- ---: - as each cervi°e. On Monday evening a - . 'gip I M�d'ica ,, strawberry - festival and the Whitby a have, tbis'week to record the death • r ., �- - MI LATTBT LOCAL H PPTNINOB RECORDED BY of qne of life oldest residents of Ringwood gt A TIIE P.KEHE3 A D BUTTED DOWN BY pOB Methodit;t choir will be the caief attrac• M.B *TE. M« ., C.M., M.C.F. t" tion. in the person of Philip Wideman, who -, S. Coroner. Off! a and Residence, GORRESPGNDk T8. i g street, Yickerioo Offio hon s: Morning ,.,._..,:,__...: passed away on Saturday morning last, in > 30 to 11:30 - Evening G to 8. O AR'EMONT .(,, the!74th year of his age. The funeral took ` __ Armadale. pla a on Mondav afternoon to the Dixon's i Hillcemeter ,� . , ,egad. Mrs. Peter M enab has returned from Miss 11. Haveart sundayed at this place. he third match in the Midland District ' Sanford, Arthur Dummond sent. Sunda with -" ENT N i� DODDS. AR MISTERS, , r ; li Y ser es was played at Richmond Hill on , 11) Phos. Jones, of the North West, is Here friends here, SOLI ITORS. TC„ 1 Adslatde atieet . +��. s Claremcn Tuesday 111y�+ f - .� with friends for few we@ke. MI6H Ida StOnehou e F rlIay lastbetween"the club oft at place . • east, ToroL o. A _- ser turned from -But rf ___ _ and the Stoc, villa club, and al. nn ex- - - -- ',.- _- - - U. IM. M. Caulpbell, Of Stouilville, was tonville last week. _, f J�-- •;-- - ceediui{ly close and interesting game, result - E. IAREWELL, >✓., BARRIS here Willi frjeild' over Suudaq. t''m Duucaii and famil s ant Sunday ,5 . TER, `caul Crown At orne , and County . , y p ed to a well-earned victory for Stouffville y Geur o slid Alexander Dowswell of To. With Haoll Penrose, of Witcotvllle. b 5c - Solicitor. ourt house, Wbi bv. 10-y .. Choice I amity Patent Flour Koo per bbl, g y 0 score cif to 1. -Free Press. , _ p routo were liters n Sunday -with friends. Our population is increasing as Ileiiry Mrs. Ed. IMichardson and -family return- JAMES MILLER, S LICI TOR, N O — AT TtIR — • Wonder -i£ Fra k is really married. He Beare was presented with a baby bey• ed on Sunday from a two week's visit with . t TAItY ul•;ic. Conveys cer. etc. Office at �T had a person res u- Ming a bride at church Miss M. Gook is very ill with the tooth- friends in Scarboro and York. Thistle H ." near Br'ougba . Money to loan. S P I lY K MIL s.J Sundaq, ache and is now under the arendal care. y g 1r p Itis man friends' will much re ret to - + We wonder :-Who will he Mayor ? If - - ------ DO�y , Me;CIIGLIV- tAY, BARRIS The Baptist $llbbath Bchool exeilrsion Hob means business ? )f Will en Dyed the marl that Wm. Holden, of the 9th con. P=cK�ZN 1 Markham, is ter ill from pneumonia. tare, olicitors, &a - O i3ce gppoeite Post t0 Peterboru Wil take place On 'Tu@ad�y, beer? Where was old Jim Sunday even N R Carmichael, M. A: of (queen's Uni- �: office, Whit 'y, Ont. Jno.-13 11 Dow, B.A.; Theo,. A. McGillivray, LL.$, Mon y to Loan. By I... . June 25th. g - h.` 4 Come to Brotfgham on Monday even in - ` . - BIG BEAR, versity, King ton,, son of Rev. DF. Car- xr f�I EDDES' K MACI> NALD, Iiarrid '" th ing n@xt for strai+vberries and to hear the - michael, offing 'township, captured a1 -A Lors, Solicitors, Notaries, Etc. Office in ( O f Whitby ChOlr. $500 fellowship recently at the John Hop-.. ('.ordon'e Hotel ---over old B nk office, Pickering, grown S Corners.r There. was a g od turnout at the market kine University. M Ont,; Saturday of each wee , Mbney to loan, Misses. ;•I. Hoover, J. Stouffer, N. Stouff- Investmentsmade. Walter . Geddes, Regivald - • . + .; . Tuesday mornin . Eggs sold for 10 ets, Mrs. L. Xilburn has returned from the er and Mrs. A. Fleury attended the garden' 1.M. Macdonald, 1� Toronto Bt„ Toronto. oddi and butter at 1`Z K18nta. west. party at Victoria Square on Saturday last r. - - ---- There is prospisot of a wedding occur• Hall Penrose, Esq:, ie drawing ties to and sang two quartettes which were highly, Zr GALLAGHER & ,60•, I�arristere, n .;{. %! . n"gst t o t i0g inn a few day, in this neighborhood. Aginootirt. appreciated by the large company. -Tri. - 4 Solicitors, etc., C o,da Life building, Toronto, will tie at their mice, Willis' Block, Look oat for parGioulars. Tommy takes a back seat at the black Brougham, every Saturda Any business or i ;I smith+ shop, 'Ir I'he Band serenaded John Barry, at• CFIERRYWOOD Instructions ldit with Tb s: Poacher; Esq., �g IIISTe' and t)ll a'e u' zled to north Claremont! the other ev@Ling, and Mr' $hank recur❑ed from Liverpool __ - throughout the week will h promptly attended l y P Sunday evening. T @road work has all been well done bv, to on Saturday. Money to o�n at 5 -per cent, know what to give your friend. were treated Lo refreshmevte. Wm. Boynton, of. Armadale, spent Sun 29-fitu i „ ; You _ ca1111ot d0 bene than The hay oro 1n this section is almost Y p all urrounding this place. ,} p day evening at �t . Grey s. -- - — - - I a total failure. In some instances the, 0 r town seems to be alive again as we ' consult Barnard, of . Whitby Our worthy poet master wears a smile hay about tweet campers with us for . I Yetertnury. his taste and pia beautiful cattle have been turned on the meadows. this week: Aek ]im Maxwe►1 why ? y pI .1 1' . r - - . A . . ` ' Di, Smith cif SLouflvillP,will visit Clare• I'red I'ostil.l spent last 'Sunday evening while. . I''. �WHALFY, ti ETERIN, RY stock of p A great number of our people have been p, j]" moue oD the lir' t snd. third rIlea 111 0f on t►;e beautiful lawn at Ma le Shade. I.11. - surgeon and Denti t. Graduate of On- , p won tiering what has been the matter with s-; tario Veterinary C011e;:e, 'r( r*to. Graduate it. i r � I -. each'' mODtII. is dental rooms- are In .(leo. Rohbin:s and family, ' of �let!vtrn t, our correspc5ndent. if he has got his back Doutistry. Member of -0 tariff Voterinary %,, �I�er®var .. i' • Ba•n y'R b.pCk, ll %t door 't0 th@ market.' were the Rne9ta Of C. Hastings OII Sunda- . 0.H„ociut,ion, Dentistry a p ciatty. Calls by I. Jas, �laitvrell hag leased the Maple tip r has he died ; but. when they come ta:, ; day' or uight promptly ctendea to. office A lamb r of the firm of 11a°donttld �t feud out, he was just feeling a little siCli. Ruy,doncr, TAlt,�;raph duct 1'gst Ofiicott, - 71ifte , W ill help t0, answer tl1C ues- L -on on, B rrist •rs, Stoufivill@, . will be St'a`le' farm for lH,+b. We wonder if the 301 Little General will take into himself a T .e yunday School intends hold7n Itq g vale. __ - tion. 1_e hast a dozen rett tier@ on Ili udtt. s, Tuesday's and Wed- ane al lawn la�ty on the beautiful lawn Wife. - } - - VE. EL•tlltrAliY SUR f`aticies in the table :w r that Lie y's.ol t�arh meek, otliee. in Bundv'a of ;! r. `IonQv on 'Tuesday June `?5th. The .. HOPIiINS, r A sad gild fatal accident occurred at t�'.. blpek * tf con mittees are making great efforts to. • GE7N, (;ra lult•e of fife (fintario Vet ygll well be charmed with. .Grey's last Monday, when his 8 year old have this the art ' of the season. , uri,i„Lry College, Toronto, reRi,tcr,d ,riet„beP D. Dolphin, «. Thomson, I'. GibpOn of the Ontario vetNrinary Mediitc] Assacii,tion Ills 11aH _Rterlillg`sjlyer a Ot)tI8 flirt was alnioNt immediately burned to p Watch P and . LintoD la't Dlonday ft�r �'4'hitbY, death, t'e extend our s 'm athy to the for he Mlle just issued. otliee, rt,siaence and eho , ,g large: •ne ana one alld g cc knives and ladles wlier the • hare; ©DlisteJ as volunteers } p On Friday last every thing way verg, _ quarter miles north of Teen liver. Steel p } bereaved fnmily. - - drivipg shoes at iron pri es. {. O ce and shop iii' rich .desi f;na, And, 1 t i8 'I'h@c' wilt be in c�aui i Spens for the DegL y dul in town., as i•ou know everybody goes- - - hours from 7 Lo -I1 a. m. au I i to 4 p. -m. Tele 1 ' most satisfactory to the buyer, ten titiys, + OSCAR WILr,F. to Union School picnic. Our school gl:a"h address Whitevale Onf , Y. U. address � tun ed- otit in grand style and received _ �', (3r, jn lii;er, Ont _ lie warrant piece to be All members O'f the Patrons of Industry I exactly as represented. lodge, S44, Oill please meet at lodge room MALVERN: firs har.ors, while J. Ilrummond was suc- II0'VIAS A. GRA} ADI, VETE- + ,I -- - ces ful in winning first prize in the teach- - . on Mbnda .,4t1> fest., as there will be a How dry and sultry keens. ars race; alKn pia young foot, ball team un 1 �I��' su; coo �, Grt ana c of the Ontario Belts, Hair Yi11 good lector@ deli erect. Orders Wil! also Veterinary -College To*ot to,r ,steres rueniber , of the 01,tario ,'eterinary ;'llec1lcal Association Link8j Stick Pins, be ta�C@n fat bio er twin@, i-harlie'and his better half were . the P K der 14 coni etin for the medal and woo picnic, it t o. else honorary luemher of :he :Ontario Medical ; Muds Brace) ts.. . ' Our path masts r has been repairing tL's I ' dare 6av the farmers would like to see great number from here intend taking sot, 'ty, treats all disea3e of domesticated ani 1 ` cid@walks Dealt erablq during t)1@ p�bt a soft spell. in the annual GarGen art which is ma." Also Parti alar a'tent on to 'deterinary party to be 1. Mont alta.. All cases pro iiptl attended to at few weeks ,land t ioq are now much fill• :,trawbtirries are very plentiful here .he1C3 at Mr. Dimma's on Friday June 28t1i. I!O:lt3Qnable rates: Office �t th well known es _ _ tabtigi,meut of (_irahau, ] roe:.bne mile west of - ; - prayed. Wonde when lie is going 'to aborts jest now. �Ve+I-hear the committee has been success- Ctsrelmdnt. TelegratnB t� Claremontpunctgal-0 paint and grafi the walk from Centre harry Urmerod.took,a `bus load to the ful hn securing the Harmonica male 'guar• ly attended to. lily union i street north. picnic on the 14th. tete, of Toronto, which is a whole evening - . _ O o u John Burton's Oldest -boy met with a •Joe Crust gave William and Uick leave. ent rtainmeTlt in themselves ; r@citations _ ' uging,� e�r�U severe accident few days ago. He step to visit the union picni..0 on the 14th. by Hewitt and H. A. Clarke B. A. of '.4Iis8 bwrab Hastings, of Brown's Cor- Toronto, also a foot ball match between ,: ped upon a nal , which penetrated tl.e iters, visited Malvern on@ day last week. Ch rryccood and the Rangors. ^+ .. i foot. Por a time the friends were afraid + ►T1HOM?,S DUNN, Conlreyaneer, Colo , �lronder if the Armadale scribe was at he Greenwood foot ball team wended JL missioner for taking Af$d vita; etc., Clare I of look jaw, but a are no,v pleased to Rosebank ? It would not -be safe for big the r way to this place -on Tuesday -evening wont, Ont. . P - — soy + Rolled l± lour, state that he is improving. . four to go; Iasi and played a very friendly match with ---I---- --- _ - Graham Flour, I. -Mesa Lizzie Dowewell and Alfred 'Tile funeral of the. late Annie Baxter our boys. There was sortie grand playing P. . R. H00� Efi,I 'SU ER OF MA'R ' - Cracked Wheati. Williams were married in Toronto on was a Inn a one, and the interment was dor a on both des; but- when time was • BIAGE Licenses. (;•#iit{e at 7eHIaeDCB Ur + Wednesdit of )Bat Reek, The bride is made at A incourt cemetery. The friends cal ed the game two to HDLs in favor . mill, Green liver. ! Refilled Oats Y g - --- �, ;1. Rolled well and favorably known here and her !lave much sympathy in their bereave- of 'herrywood, although the Greenwood , u BUNTING, acne of Marriage many triends joi us in WidLling that She ment. boys made some very close -calls on goal, L •. LiceDees for Ll1e cunt of Ontario. Of Corn 1�1 ca),. , - _ „ . „ y.. young couple may have. a very smooth Mr Burns• of Sunrise , the fast bicvcle an some remarkable shots. The return floe at the store, or pt is re ,Benue, Pickering i I curiae throw h life. rider, has purchased a wheel from ,Mr. + ma �h wi31 be la ed at Greeawocd some Village. lL p I Y is Parkiusou. - He rode !Smile iD 1L minutes tin a in the future. - ------�-=: - if fi0 Call OI1 Mrs. Eddy %r !) give a picnic to .her AR. F�EATON,'TOW . 1 . CLE K . pupils on the aft recon of Friday 213th. and 3 sero j,d:j the other day, and is there --'-- -�+•: t,onvoyegcer, C tnmis ionexfor-taking - -` �' Spy fore the fastest wheelrnan on the "Sun• - , aSidavits, AccouintanL and insurance t Agent. . jj - • in l�nderhill's 'A oods. • ZD former years rim •, - - MARKHAM, ��- _. Money to to n on far property. Willy pro- ` �• E11nSST it has b n cubt teat's'. to have aD exam --_ - - ; �} WALLABY. he -annual Lawn Socia) in connection - bated: OF1`7C>i7-9t bite ale. Will be in li]at100 nd inch r c:,�aiug. ►.ut th8 l+it., r - ... wit Zion Church, Cedar Glove, will be �Icn ay .af ernoon for the Elm Dale Mills, Pickerin y popular. We are idea see a to be ver traasact,on of business 27 v x Brougham ever I"5 U IiRttSgE, - - -- -- re tsps s e roue .delight• alethe e f Mrs. Dimma "Wil - . ONEY TO LO N PPT�Y TO eu little fo k will b h het i cued o to d o Friday evening the 28th inst. Aled ov r be picots. A Tamworth pig, about months old of alone in lacrosse does Markham Al Hutchison,, app aiser Claremont for I - Canada Permanent -Lon & s ving8 Co., head THE WLTN BOX '' •ss 1 and Isi'geat in the pen, was stolen from hot a prominent place, for we see by the' s pf ioe, Toronto, Stock apital S8,000,0W, Total I . , BROUGHAM. J E. Gould's farm adjoining the town on results of the art School Examination our - assets $8,700,000. Theo w all ]end money on `` + Thursday night )set. Hi h 8chool'stands among the foremost in .. tJF` C'ANAI)A. lowest currenttraesyof interet andi on favor- + i lki hoe. Plilip�is. very ill. A nerve caretaker iu the person of F. the province. In fact only three High bole ,ter,ne of as a m nt, � rsslu bed la + Heard has been a ointed for the Metho- he ools and five Collegiate institutes ob- boutures purchased. o tom issiu . No delay WHITBY BRANCH. + �� Matthews Is r00oV@Cing slowly. pp :: r:x11 .penses moderate. f 4eti _ ._ 1'a s Hog!@ w are"a broad ami)@ --Ilea dist cbureh in place of Mr. Trann who re- tai ed more certificates. One hundred and - - Capital a tutborizod...,.. ,.� .....�,,:_ ,000,°00 girl, t sigti�d through ill health. seventy Cer.tifcates fell to the lot of our AA, POST, . NTY ARCHITEdT Capital 86becribed.:...:......:. . .e0o,000 The raising• of a new barn and straw u Ila. + for .the count of O tarfo, Drawings Capital Paid-up • • . S40,0W John Burton boy is said to he improv, h . Tea t p , ' and specifications fur ished for every class of Re,at............... . " ... g�y�, fig , Daae at Fred eby'e,- [Jxbridge own W e are pleased to note that Mies E. • _ building. Steam and hot water 'heating aiz+i �OAHDOF DIRECTO Ja n K@DCII and wife -are .at Lindsa • eh►p, on �Itlnday, was successfully aecom Ac erman late -assistant teacher in Mark- oentilation, a sgeciaa Office—Gorrie ]oc'Jt y pushed the barn was put together in an ha Public School has successfully eased venter Dundas and Brock streets, Wbiti; John Cowan, Esq., }'resident.' this eek. Y P y flour and a taartor. +• R�ubon H- Hamlin, Es lora - q the third year exam. in Toronto University. Besidence-Kingston Load Eaet Pickering. 7•y- q., Vi Eras McKay, of �9hitevale visited at Dr, In the change of Methodist preachers on Mr. Will Yoang has passed his second year. _ _ W. F. Cowan, Eafl., W. F. Allen, Req , J. A. (Iib- i p HOMAS POU HER, IcensedoAuo• son, Escl., Robert Mclntveh, la. II: lJowaR Bates�lU's last w ek. %Vbitby district this year ger,•. R. Leitch an Stanley'Robinson his first except in I attoraun, Esq, ti weer, Valuato , etc., for East York and T. II • Mc h1,llan : - • • . • • • • :. ;ashler. 14ir' Wagg, weft of liens lids 'reoo� eyed goes to Greenbank, and Reqs. J. Harris one or two subjects which they will take of e the whole of North a id South Ontaxio. Striot from hia, severe illluoss, and E. A. "� . Dove go to Greenwood. the supplementals in September. attention given to all ( r,'.ere Uy Ynail or telegraph. A Genera) Banking bnsinees tri ""ted. Quito a nuoi•beir from here attended the Rev• James Anderson, ,formerly of Ux lie case of Mr. Wheler vs. the Town of Oharges Moderate. .9 ]dress THOS. YQUCAE$, Drafts issued, • Box 47, Brougham, O i s payable .n all parte of •anode, Schu l picnic at Rosebank, bridge, goes to Belleville north. Eat Toronto, to recover the balance of ac- United States, and on London. Englao t, pay A fakir, said to be the on@ who sold cou t due on s able in all p Th re will be III serv'io@ in the Presbp- pecial audit of last ear, was - - -- i parts of Europe. Hi�hesL uncut gold watches here for a Boller a few ears Y POSTILL, U'0'ftdN SER, ETC' rates of interest allowed en Suviug Hauk. terlan church w4t Sabbath. Y bro ght up at the Diyision Court, Wobarn, -. �• Greeni}t,ver, s ]frits sales from his nun - Deposits and erediLed holt earl t3 ,e'ial bt ago, worked a similar.game sucoessfally on on stands last and was adjourned with y y' l Join Hood, s bee lad friends froth Y 1 erous friends both fa an(I.:iea,r Hales of f rms,. tel -tion to collection of Farnhor's sale notes. �' Y the street Monday night. He was accom- cos s against the town. Sig witnesses ' farm stock, and ever Ling the is to boo will Ig. D. WARREN the ci y visiting kl1w this week, Hied this time by a woman instead of a be handles by the s rbscrit,er with the atinost MAN oRlt. jjtjr, fIsndere°Ia and hit( entranC® claEe 7� we a examined. Messrs. Armour, and A. - cart, and sold to the era best advantage.. #Sly •. ' - L b — man. usinesA has no Bou t gone well 1 - - -- - - - - ar p tting in their best digs thea@ days. with him of )ate ears and warranted hire ___ _ _ __ _ �'F i fame appeared for the town, and 1 Y Me yrs, Lobb and Baird for Whelyr. The TF1E CELEBRATED I:h 1<iay crop as almost a failure Ler@ iu taking a wife. She eat in the buggy as tae will not come up again anti) next I . ��]'EY TO LOAN this y ar owing to the txoes6lve beat and an ornament, while he did the faking. cou L unless the judge issues -orders to have pTr A . -..L._ � .(JN— .., LEHIGH VALLEY COAL dry at atter. A meeting of the License Commissioners it argued in Chambers.-Economist.� ..., I I . I -. ;M R 1 17Ir111 S ECJ R iTY� g Tli 'Lat3i�s Ails of the CLristian ohurcL of NOrtb UDtario will be held zaext week to clef Steinoff diad on Monday last. Th@.. -. . _­. aoknowled ed to be the bei field ,Strawberry social at Mrs. Joseph Consider• some applications for transfers of fun ral was held froin -his late residence mm., �� ATE coal mined. , , harks on Wednesday evening. It was a licenses. J. A. McDonald of -Sunderland Bo- Grove, on Wednesday: 4 - _I + - - : euros $. is selling out to :firs. Foy ,of Whitby, fakir struck town ou Saturday night bought and a Id on commiasi n. T. Forsyth of Rothes to L. Hut- An under the electric light -� ,,,.I AM 71iJPORTINQ 1-)1_nI; .7.,., Cla mons Braes band passed through }y ght in front of the here Saturday evening on' their way ohison, J, Saunders of Goodwood to T. Fr n+klin House played for suckers, He Agent fq� Fire, I, ife Ac ide'nt, Plate ,,,,FROM THE MIN 14i'S....- Forsyth, and E. Derusha of this town to p Glass and Ste ri Boiler Insurance 1 -` - home roe, Brooklyn. The treated us lit his vocation with every success to y Wm. Ianson. It is not often that so many hi solf and th@ bu ars "axe now hard -to 1. r Why bey inferior cos) when you o gat to su a fine mupC, changes take place in ea ;short a Lime.— find. y Two houses in Pickering to r®nt of fol Ro rt Beattie, who ie aizung Conoid• Journal. E -sale. the best for same price. be Bell Telephone Company are put-' x erable�notoriety in the Beattie—Decker Visitors to the Park will henceforth be - in a new line from Toronto to Montteal. { 1 bores e, still enjtrys liberty and three able to resj their weary bones without ly- There are about 200 men working on the Conveyancing ar felly dol @ at a rliuch ,•;,.O ICE AND YARD..... squat meals a Clay. ing on t e damp ground as the Town job, and their am a ower rate than suall char ed. Tit f camp t the foot of the 10th Y K The majority of our S. S. teachers and Council h decided to put seats in the con., makes one think of the Barnum and ' S ,_ les searched a d. certified to when GING 1T...PICKERING taus.. required, rivals funds al- '. officer. were .00napiCuons by their absence p Ba'ley circus, ' + t on Su day mot ping. They attended the J• W• Thompson, while disorbing a ba• here is every remise of a ' ways an and to login at (Opp Gordon Howie) nava stalk of rte fruit on- Saturday ease- > good days - Christian confer�noe at Altona. Y spat here Dominion Day.. The prizes . the • to est rate of i. �. DEC ER. ing discovered one of those venomous rep off ed are in ever case worth -R A miamber of file firm of Massra. Mae-, qwinning, i 'terest. I - tiles, a tarantula, which made its immedi- _ - donalt� «k Lennon, Barristers, etc., 13tou$• goo racing, football games for which s W- . . RICHAZIaSOT ate escape from sudden death. While in )are purse is offered, lacrosse games, hose ' TORONTO. FINANC AL yilte, Fill be here ' on Monday of ea°h search for there lite on Moeda howe however , t���. • ' O!$ee: Dale's Bloc , Pickerini[ week. Offilbe in 4erow's block. *tf p y' y res races, and to amuse every one a greasy, --.—__ . _ __ _`__ I Mr. T. discovered it cosily ensconsed in one pi race will be arranged. CORPORATTQ�N �, MoAulay preached a very inatruo . cor>0er of the store when he pat an end to seers. D. Beldam and J. gainsay, were •�.� xx t PICKERIN PO'ST OFFICE. — f Live se mon on Prayer on Sunday last. its further antics, and now has the retrains in town on Monday to day last collecting for Sear- 11�11IN -- He thi ike many of our. churches are. af• for the inspection of those who wishv be fair. Trains on the Main line G. T . faits arrive from T ionto 9 50 s.m jF P. f t �' y S s r Autborized Ca � X00 00 teciod ith the dlr rot owin to •lack of We. hawei this w k.to record the death of R. ill stop at the bridge, Markham ]road ails close Toronto b b6tim, i Arrive G,T,W, 9 gg in dose G T w6 56 a m: Subscribed G s��t �� Prayer{ one of the oldest residents of these parts, `aro sing on the day of the fair and busses M4a, iu the rstfin of Mrs. Davifl Turner, of the rt .. GTE 0 30 $ ra " i Bary Mr. Elliott preached hie farewell 1� wit be ran to the rounds at b ' Whitby 8 4g m a nE 8 00 c,rmrl west and who eased awe saturda q wo urn GTE 6 4u p rn I O T air -e sermo on Sundlay evening. We -wish •, P Y Y Do nybrook is one of the few successful S;" P This Cain' atsy 2isve oyiened'a branch i the morning. Inst. Ddxs. Turner has been ill 0.r money orders' issue ori all him supoess in his new' field. of labor. He sho s. -$an. p sof lila world: .Village 01 ickering, in the office. Late) rte Des t3ea rave, where we nndt'xstaed a for some months past, and her death was - opuiec,p the Ontario Bonk, under Lha w , ]{ ii = 884IDf(�6 s�� s4 Ilt>�/�, went d'i the undersigned.- �� tins '!p�trsonsga" awaits pile.. Ant altag@ihar uneapeoted. Deoe�ased snd , Deposits will be received and interest al awed bar husband, the late D. Turner, were resi• hos• Calloway, who has . been in the ,/ i3epoeite received b d interest-' ilowed at - ' Th,e lrnniversary eerviCss of the echo• Un ted States far some titre, hie return at h, beet rates. dents of Scott Tp., from its earliest days, s per cant per inn m. t3eoiirit isdiepntablQ Dna to Issued on all parte, a0nso6iane ads dist $n roh will be Mild op Bantle at►d J ed o OehawA, and will soar start a ma p bat after TarAar, a death the family o Z'V sin. �,o� , on very liberal terms, looney balled on 0t�e Moults IIAAt. On •SUtt►dtty &*I' Mr. Uo � y , K--. Y { - �- and other swrtntwe. _ ablrid , j , bet .they _bave to- obi e. eliop over Alex. Garrow s black- . a� r..a poeft-,tq�« � ORO, g tl , � e r. Arm tU rash A ,1� ,,tet, i}rand + b Q - t m th h �� it e - t I" _ j S1�r � + " 4 3 is k -- .. I . -I -.. , : I .. a M-. a. ?,^ L 1 i`�aM "(t..n: :�! 1 - - It .,t�1M,T f}:. :.,1 .... ... i. ice.. I T. .t.... f�:' Yr I T%-il+. Y „.,,- .. .U,_. ... __. - m - ,., ]' g , ., '�? Wit:' s, -i , i . s- !r a 3, .. - . �' ,y .. . - < ✓ <. f _ . _,,{,�{-. .. '.L. `$:. , 'w2- ,, . :' til c C�'� 50N.l N-0 - - - . ,,KA ,y --, -:..; .. .: .7;. i .r :f i,-.. w,- - z Q G ) .Ji 'iC - -Y'., :-Y.1�• v .".k _ : ,, •' Wig" , . •, z c _. _ ,--- ,,�, k r. ,- -. t 4 3. w • ` # .._ n. . .t. w rti - ' . -Mill - m.t..., -:. i.. - f'n'F.ti. - ..... ... _ ;SiL-._ _ 5 .. 7 . -- �. :, .. „_ t. a - l rffiYd.-lv.. .- .c. - _ _ - _ .a a'-`�i35�, '.'�".Y 1.1 fl•SaA.,.. .s3 - �!'Wf lleg __ ,I' lxl_�--� . ­,� . 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I . � � � ,"k �. , '.. . � - , " , , I I- � - . � 1, I , 1 � - -_ -7-- . - . - I __1 : ,� -_ '. � - , , , , .1 J , . : - I -_ . � - , I ­ - . !!-., � .:,-- ': ,,, . , "; � , , . . _ � " � -_ - -_ .. I I - I I . � -1 , . , I., I ­�...: W".. '­ .11, 1. , -I - _,., � ., . ." � , , - : ,�t :� . I 1; - . - - - - . . - . I . . 1� �. � - 1: -_ Z - ,�. " � "I" - - , � -, �_ X ,- _ ; . . , �. � . 11 , ; . . I � I , G IN, ENGLAND ,,, - I'- - - i - . . - , - - . - .. "i - . ­.�� - _* � , 4 .L, i.- �. ,�. , . ,,, .. . , . .. �, ... . . ; . I - , . . - - - - EARLY PRIN TIN - � � . I I , . � , ­ : I 10 ­ - - I . . I . , _. .. .1 : : , __ -. � ­�� I :. . , . ­;, . ;,.n . . .. -_ ., ; _ . . - . .: -_ I ; , . ­_­ . 11�i I .. -_ I - - � -_ .: �, , - � . 1. � . I . . . . . -_ I . I - ORSES., . � I - -_ - � - . . - . - � . I , - - � � I - . - � - TZ66' __ - _' I � ­� . 1. IT CALMS sHYING. 9 . , 1�__ . I � . . . . �_ � . I . - . . : . i � . : I . � P . i WIT= IMA � 1. � - �. . . - . �. I - , - . 11 .. I I . . �_- I ... . I - - � . I: � . . . . I __ _... ��__­_ -- . ' I " ": 'u , I .. � be r1oln " of Typ'ligrimplisly-wess Cos . x9eft ­ . 1. - - I i~.� r ­­_ . -- ; T as , . . r . . _ � . . . .- . . . 1. I I ... I f. -VD COMMEZTTS. - U 0- i ' Morton has sIP6d the bill _. _. I . . I - - . the irlissa IR-RX111411111 - . . � _. I - - ­ ,yo TEL� Al � I .� 111. TUB NEWS IN I NUTSHELL overnot � . I irrilklier I ' . I . . A. . - : . . � a , ; :- . I—. I - 11 V., �r . . - not imprisonment for arson A MAK1164011le ult Poatenled by es 1was"Rans . . . -ontribution to the eal .--. - - .- i r 1. . . -err I . - - .. I - _ ,.#�, . making the t . . . .. - Z. . . . I .­ , . - . . - - . . . - - ;__ . ­,.� ".. - 4��­ ;,q � , ... - I . __ _ .., . , , , - �i, 7,-. -. - - --.�- __ . f'.'�' ­r'e -f __. - ' . r -, ,-, __: _ 1. .-., �-: . .. . - - - . . - ..- .. o: 'd ,:.. " � I- ' * ­�.!�, , _ _ I . I... _.:I'_. . - 1. first degree forty years, . Investor - I . . An interesting 0 Mr. - ­.- .. .. _,� ,. - 2:.1 - :: the 11 is made by . . I I � - _1 I 1. -Some of h I g an' nowipaperm RY LATEST FROM ALL OVER B - . 'for making history �of . - I . . 1. kaglish printing . - .1 . . � � � - � , t e Be. "'08 tis VE i ' School tfi&o�hsre professing 6116' nOmhu A really rsnir� skable devio's . .; . . ' their country's ,Von havo been barred out of Butt in the latest numhor of. . 'been bitterly oppose(, to THE WORLD. . - " I - . - [ � 'I, '' .: . - asitholic roll$ so _ . I 11 � .. __ A N:. : �', " �: , -, ; - "L�� ' old ilk Kama" City, Kans". any Shying horse perfectly calm INDA ts' t- W. H. All -� M69" . -. .. _� - � - - . . I . ::: �,-, L�'�. � r.' .�, , inis Mr. . 4 ­ ". . .1 . � . State under its _1 . . , �:, _ .- ongo F -cc I - - ' -_ I , ..� �, . �. ,he public Solid OA. To this . taking ther C ­... _. I ., .. I ' . . I . - . I � ... : ­ ".� L , "- .:1. � i I " , 1. - - ". �­ �... � %_'. - tri, Archbishop Roartok, of St. Louis, Mo., able' is the new invention of Henry Small, Bibliographi f he early . � -I. . i .,- -- - protection. ,Lqfauy a their xerria' mutt, @onom & brie review of t , � �,�%`. � _. I . 111110�0'11'(Jasglltewns Abolit Odr Own Cause an been i by the Pope, and, the of Hartford) Conn. Properly apeaking it All . ' . - - - __ . -1: hysteric%l andinacour but theyoordially Great l3rAtaliss, the VoltaA state'll, and 06posed . Kain has been APPOiDt- . - . t go into the provincial printing press in England which - - . . 4 � �: - ; I . .. live Globe, Con4enned And ,%oat Rev. John J ,1 U at a 11 bit," for it does no I a mords of - . - ' ­ . . I - ­ . . : .. 1. U their positlOP) which is worth All Parts or . �d in his stead. . � . . set* a possible change in th . . I - I.. �e-. I nite in + d L Assoried ior Ew Reading- - ..,1 � outh at all, but is ODIY ft AiMP16 sugg . - - . .. . ,�'. �; _ * . . . the genius an :1 t',,.:�_, � ,off , f d, - m�itoi occurred on a horse's m - I . : I - I I . I : . - _; . I noticing, because -it WliaA I - .1 . An alp on 0 us printing, and at a I events shows how . . - . ".. . . . .- ' .1 OANADA- . ..­ I .- 1. I .: � . - . ' . . . ­:': I e. They say, in :. �].'. ,.- - - ­. - -: ... I...-., '. . team drill at, Erie, K Capt. Lathrop and ..- . I - ­... I . L'. d was the spread of the now art in that L . ­­ � destiny of the hUMILIk rac . '. -4_-. to pieces and . ..; . � .: - I .., �, rapi . 4 .- . to arrived at . ­ . I . :_ . - ! I I . . i. . .. ­­ a never -During lay 768 iinmigran Driller Harritty were torn .. I , . - ... .. .. . - : 0ountly. . . .1 .. . . _. I ­ i�� 1. . . _.. oubistanee, that tropi I Africa wa i . . . - - � -'T . . * - L . . ­ . I - L . I - IM I ... .. ... - though Wi i I I four others badly hurt. . 1. . .:: 1. . L: � :�_ .. I . ' ngland ' - - ' ­. �.� . � � ized mon'- and that, nnipeg. �. . 1. I . '' __ 11 -_ . made for civil 11 . ,- �gre'ps It is stlLted that the UnItad6tates Gov- ` . "' - ' , .1 I _; I The first press elit,bbli9ftlild in . . I , � . i . . � I I . I . " - . � I in the , Friends of John R. Hoolior titiOD- 1 . . I- hen -as � . �_ . - 'bankrupt themselves . I � ... ­ ,­ I was in Oxford# t � ,.�.. -1. _.., .., pations should . . 4or hisrelease. . . rnment like decided to make a thorough I . C I..., � - . .:!r,: _: .1 I .% I . I - ontaide of London . * I' - .- - g . .. when it , . .- � � ", �, . .. �_ �. claim ib the region w: ill never in 4 Colima disaster, 1. I .. ... wne The date . ., . . . . i ­ . I.. effort tore I en 'ask for an ine-reaffe of -iCvest1ga'ion into the i_� . ) - I now & university to . .L.. ­ . � . - ­ rate with the men Hamilton firem ' ' � i - . ,�', . . - . g question ...- - . .. .V�i - . , __ yield benefits comme isu . $5 & month in their salaries. which cost so many livea. . -.,.:, i . I . - . W&m first used operse an interestin : - . . . I I , ­ " . f - . . ;� - I . . . : - , I I . . .1 - The . .. - _� I .. � ­ � I . , i I . _.�: � I -- . ;" �_.: L: ,and money it will coat. How do thby- . taxes of the County of"NI iddlesex .. Professor William Gardner Halt, head : � .. - . ." . .1 in the general history of printing. . I - .. 1. ?_ . . tie is a wise man The of Latin in the University of � ' -- I., � it "I "N MbOI4 :. .. : . _. 6P_.-,.: L ' this in true? year will amount to $70,368. professor � . *_ ad wZ1 "ExPO6iOiOiUS' . .- - . .1 . - know that this 1. - , . I- . I first book issu .- .. . .. , - . I - - . ­ ... o is able to %@sign limits to a of reTnOVID9 Chicago. is to be direotor of the now Amer . - - 11 . . . . ,� - I ­ Indeed wh An operation for the purpos � L i I ' Apostolor loolion, or inscrip- . . - . .: - h I - ican 30hool 91 Cla'soitisi in Rome for a year. . 1'. � . ... �1 11� ! , um.lo The 00 . 1. I . .- at prophet among erformed on Mayor Stew I I ,,Ili 1 I y "' - . . 'L human enterprise. , a turnor will be P . a . - �,!' I I - -- . , . - . I . . �. , 'in- . '_ . . t 4 1 , ! OL . .1 ' . - - Mr.'0. P. Lounabury, a graduate of the -_1 tion at the and of this first book bears . - 4 . . . - gric i� , L I � h data M.Coco.liviii (14 115-1 , . tq,ll the olkauges that human art of Hainilton- - ill 68). This � I --L.'-- Us oan fore ' i ultural Coliege, and .' 11 I" ,,I " - - L _ . I - . W.k . - I'; - r_� ., - ;�; -on Ithis & bea�er dam hao'been' discovered in the m&soachusettA A Per- _ - I k % _ t 'I, I p!aiuly t . . . __ . .. � L ­�.�, I ... genuity and art may yet effect � rojeoted Hudson Boy road, assistant entomologist of the Hatch Ex' . - A % % 1. % $" . - in acc lly by bibliogra,phere as ' .- .... - . .-! _ .1. � _I- -11- line of the p I iment station, under Prof. C. H. Fern%ld, , ,:. . 0 , If, - rrect it - .. .� .- I . �__ globe ? ._..:. .. .. , ;. �._ , " . .1 :. - :, , '. ': north of (I'lladetone. . . South I,,, 11 o I I , r . . .. . .; . - ­ . - __ �., . . . a call to Cape Town, � ) . a misprint fo 1478 ; but if it IN cc - . - 11 ... � _. ____ .. .­' 1. I . � I - . ­ 1 . ­ tinder fr6rn.th . �. 'On W" no - . ' _ , - . . - ��:'o '_ _' . ' I I � eceived a 0 has received I 11 Il'l I ., , . t the - . .. ­ .- . . � . � J. '. . A large part of our bu a �. .. - ­_... _.: Electric Light C'mpany tw,o light a city at Africa, an Government entomOlOMiBt- �il t�� All,,!, , I . insane that William C&xt . Hamilton has r . - . . . . _ , sin as to-daY is !to 0 . I � � , , " , .. first English printer, inummuoh as he did Bat-. - . . - '. " , e - ., L . Th .. V111.1 I I " I -I.- I - . . . . ,1,:. a now national headquarters of the .-. L , I 011 t . I . - . .- , ., 1., 1.1 I . .�"L;�­ fit this world more. perfectly for human use $91.25 per I&-np Pa- year. . York was dedi. I . I'll ,,I-. I I ntil 1476- - . _ : '' ' '� . Westminster a - - I . n why salvation. Army at New 1111 ; - 1;.,� I Al not up his press in . . - I � ,, ,_ as a habitation. That is the reaso The postal ruthorities intend taking C ,,, - . - il - . ..- - . - . .10-, . - - . . I cat ed by the leading officers of the army. , 1� I il, - . . I bat the date of the Oxford - .' . �L, - - - - `:�,%. .' _. I � Is, lay cables action sgains.r, a number of email traders in .. 77. Assuming t. � . . " . we dig Suez and B Wc can& I a Itiew building Issabsen erected at a cost I . . - � I . . . ­ : . . .., - . a Pa. Th , - . . I . . b9ok is incorrect, and that 1478 in right. it I . . . . . . L ..- 1, - 1. % . � . the Win "jail L, .. - - .. - - .11 . - ' ; . . nilpeg who retail postage fits . . ,f !.: , - . . . . , � . under the ocean, bu lid railroads over of 1150,600. 1 ;W , ot far . . . � . , . � . 1�1­ I : _ ' . : L�. ' : I I The offer of the county to Be' the ered the *1 � I ), � - I . - shows that the university town weel n ' .- . 11 I.- �, . -7 1 ...., i - mountsihop and irr,gate the desert ti I it L 000 was Burglars on Monday n ght ant i , - I .. I . . ­., . . building to Hamilton City for I ", 111%1�lr . I capital.- The name of I - it of the State Treasury in Concord, N. ,, )., ,.' 'he English � . . . I . L I behilid 1, � . . - . . 1. - . : . ­. ; . . . 11 L,: � - . blossorno; like the i ose. - By long experi L the Oxford printer is not known certainly; I . . 1 - � 4 �, . . . I � . refused and a now jail will pr 'bably be ` tole six thousand dollars. ,rho , . - elders it possible that - . _. IL-4 a, _ . H., and . .. . I . . . L a greatly improved the say of the T&Ult, .� . L I I ,��, .-,.- �.., � .- ment and study *a iav I - ilt. � . . . . I .- I - .1 . .. bu I 1. I burglars carried am my . I ova but Mr. Allnutt oon - I , the metho I #. ,R, 'Alley, a 'Well -k own real not be opened till Tuesday D%Ae.piece t'hat ii, -cc- r the horqo a uppe . . - r � do and accelerated the processes . he was Thoodoric Rood of Cologne. I . I I �.'.__��.__: 1. "..: _. . Mr. &ad it could , -Oxford; for in 1480 - 1 �_ � - - Id, mature. ,Two centuries on' to man, and pro;�oter of Am iorat Park, - ily draw on or St. Albans follow,ld I � g. � _ I �: _; of taming wi th . night, . L . lip, butdoes not utioessar . . 1W. _. I . _� has enteped an action for $500, against 0 stati Univele ems the driver o,one Loometyme soolornayster of Saynt - - .. ­ I 0��, .'- -.:.- ': elspeed before u Bishop Doane one of tb even scarcely touch it uni i . t tonchud Albons"' published the '49legancie" sif , .. . - r� ,t4i�_. ­, ...- .. - . he Montreal Street, Railway. - ' o a graduatiu has migentle pull on it ; then - 1. .- . ; � , -. - -1. " - America t ri- ity regents, in an address t 9 ­ . . : . I L I-— . o much account; but & singlO t I Dathus. The prose W" in - �1�i_.. : -: - I .L ;on of seeds at he Expe i 1118,18 at St. Agnes' Sohool fh Albany on work I I - .,� �1' . ­ __ I . L : : .� . � I . century afte . r Aus ralia drew the world's The distribut b closed on May 31st, Thuredgyp donouviced the movement in the and of the maims,11s Dome or upper iip ; . nations r six years ; it cie"ad its ' ­ ...'. . I _1 :.. W ..,-,. ­ 0 sig tion fo . . __ . n') " am game year that the Oxford L - ILAr..' .- . L mental farm, whio - hich should ' !P . :._. I L , -: '. notice, saw 0 - . � , 1�1.v�, .. � �, the full flower of civilization The tot,%I numi er of favour f woman suffrage in a very vigor and that more touch, w in 1486, the . 11 . . il . .. .. was enormous. he - . - I . . - . . . � I ,. . , - . , ..-L *�­'- blooming The I - L. I "' . � i�, �. e I., � - - there. most of Africa in the applications was 31,145. Of these 26,033 ous manver. He believed that ronforring be increased much, does tile who.1s. bubi- press did no, and its I"t � bOOIE W" t , I L . C - . I - irrupt her famous - . . . 91 . - I .� . . - - I and Ye have been supplied. the1raDohis6 on woman would cc . . . . . . � �. 'i-�, � � '... .�.,�," discovery of the past half ceDturyi ' ' � . cc #OKI 01r ft - .. . - . . ,4 ,.. ALIANS . � - . "� . - I , a, ...�, I— . .. . The station a4ents al*"kJ the lines of the ril the existence of- Dean. - . I : I � R. I l. - I t continent , sid NortheTr moral nature and impe Mr. 'Ams,11's "Contrivance connitits- of 1buted . . ­..., I '��._ - - L. we know far mar of that gres, . _ . 01'��'- - -1 " . - I CansAian 1,acifio railway a . the nation. . d t ol wh ioh Dame J ul ians Bernare cc atr ' NI., _. s. ,,�_ pacts to -day than was known of . ort in very onoollrol,9111,11 from the United simpla head strap, property � -N�_-- '- - ` ­- in all its as Pacific railway rep Telegraphic Intelligence. a eyes and an essay on hunting, which has given her . �;�'._' 'N Chris- edia in Manit,ob,i one advices, %ad coming down between the b"res' . a sort the credit of being the author of the entire ,!- . .� ­ - ,,, . . �,LV, * . . �.. :-:.; _.. - America three hundred years after terms as to tile crop proop States quite confirms provi - . I - .� .­.. _ . � _­ 1 d it rile, to. its and in thin shape Of . . L - � . - � . ­ . li�,: ` ,-.: . : topher Columbus had discovers -, Are and the Territories. . add that the satisfactory statements. of most life upper, li� This latter book. L I I . %_ I - '. I - . . .. - 1. � The memorial monument to Do Maison , are every- of little mem - 0 - . York, the seat of the northern Arch* . . - _� iff4'? . aware th t one of the great growing oonfidenoo and business a ut two inches . - . . of metal, only .. .�,-� , - , ___ ­ - - - ­ vheae critics .. . Is piece , . . ,�. � L, � . . a founder of MontroAl, Will be un - bishopric, received an a freeman in 1497 one I I �, 1. .." ve, th whore becoming more general ancidsoided. litt wide, in humor . I . _Z " . . . . . . . . age a how to turn the neu, ant is salum- o ud not half an inch " can later ' W prol?lems of the ,. y on Dominion day. Thi ' curving Frederick Freez, described some y _. - - . I . I , , veiled in that cit' 5 In,fact the e.ugniouted movem I D a' Its . I .. .­ - 1;�. _. .; lit account for Bill I t4 s lisfy called a ­,,trollsy bit," first book L. . .. - ,-1: k --r': - - - �. . tropical regions to -General has been invited ing here and there the aspect of � boom,and ot do- as a " r -" but the ,:. . �. I :%__ Governor rdinary bit, are so buke- ryntei , did I .--.1 . .- . �� . 1. . k side -ands, like an 01 nted in the - - ,-' , . . progress is ' 11 on the known to gave been pri -1 _1` I � -..,!., , 1. th t a erfoorm the ceremony. - .. & few superconservative People OYOD thin _. . . :' 191., I ­ ,manklnd, and th t a ormous P vined thai a, very slight, gentle PU Directorium I- .. .." k- :., -. - ' f . ­ �., . . - ., . the mor- 0 the body of an islet the capital Of Britain was a go . . :.J'_ - L. -'-. - __ . a,rd its solution ? If . An inquest was hold ' a' that the pace towards greater prosperity is 11 tro0ey bit"' aga : :-I � .- :!.: . I :_ I . pr,-, . .,. 1��. � �­ makingtow . infant tound dead at tiamiltOn- . ThO being made too fast to maintain. An aver- reins brings the Sacerdotum," printed in i509 by Hugo I . -*_A� �' . . tality statistics 4 f the white race within - ago of the advioda received, however, tip of the horse's none. i was in Steengate streaL - - , . : .­, �. I - I E :� -7 . . - � I � go they sho'w' that ver'diot w" death from neglect and starva odio, revival In complete absorption In the study of Gooz, whose Press rt Whitinton, the . . - I . 1-11 ' . I .: . � ­_ R �- -�' - ' _. the tropics prove knythin .. ould not decide whether indicate a, steady, not a spasm ores may be driven Ursyn Milner and Robe . im- - ;.- . . tion,but the jury c perience the h . . . .. 1, -1 I � � - - �: 1. - ca . . eat, published . . I .. 1. .. � .� ., "R,,6-,__ 1 1 rry on out enterprises b6n left on the of trade all over the t1nitaid 8tates, DOt in & Dow Ox ive. or lat in Blake str � .. R _ . - . .� we are learning � the child was &live or not w -ight up the side of a noisy locamot ter printing . - ­ �, , , - 'e, _. I . 1. _. - a few industries but in all. Wheat in i Piro. . . . � . I I untain side. - . , W der our own super .banging trolley car, that books in York in 15-1 (L ' 90 .- .1 __, - - � ..-. there, of every a to un (. nio ding up of a - gong of thiri�y-one y6arst 01, - . . . . 1. ,�Vl .T",. . . . lj� sn,no-unced ths' the beuoli* maints.ining ita advance, oottOn 14 9 . ­ . ; � . 7. , � - an t . - . , . �. - . vision d witho t undue imperilment of It is officiall t , wool sales are larger than for a Santa to the horse, under ordinary cirount- After. a silence rams in , " - . � . - . 11 � . : - : ,Ltion have struck off he roll i price of a movin ford was honored with a second p I in )a, too minister aspect go _. ". . ! are in convoc - iuoted better, hides stm,noe it issued books for two years, under - . - . �k I � :_ ­... life. - ­ ­ I - . �_, I , &rne of William Middl �- long time past, tro i &.living �hing�,,Ioiog without any 1517 ; . . \ __ ... ,.Z� ... ;, - . �_' . . . I- i I - �.. .;: . . . . I -;. I of -barristers the n Inalth!r is vori strong. perhaps a of John 8061ar and Charles � _ - �- __ .o . _..� .. . I - , !Ie i - I - : . .. . s - . , i , .., � * *Hall, , is visible means ai this directio i- I ... I � .,V _ �. . -.,. - _. I , t - who was mixed up in the Toren �o are firmer, and money of com on ; and in his r the un - 0.� � .. 1. , . 1. . ... _' . . . ? n Labour is iu better demand, . Bastion at the Kyrforth, and'as the books bea. 1, ii -S , � . . . -- In Britis r nstkn�e,teh'e aland'al triet. attention to the now so hat the Prem - . iXt - ,� . I . I Civic boodling ispeculation rite, and 04) of vamiLy a . . i _.�_., - - ­ .., . . t Indi a, fol I investigation. plentiful and easy, i in I ka no Doti irms, itlis possible t to . . 4F'_ 1'_ . 1_ � ...., ,I � te'"ong Europeans was 84 to the Mr. S. A. McCaw, Manager of the Lake advancing. All round the out- tip of'his not he will tA or- was the first " UDiVersity press recor(led. I . � , - , . . . I ­ - --!. .. - . death ra ' a& are a . . . . ., I .-.,. I ! '' 1 � f this century, -of the Woods Milling ComP&nY, is sutho i- wl in a satisfactory one. . the oar or of the locomotive. The que . ord, bail, no . .. - . . I I-- .. I . thousana in the eirly part o loot . I ' nt Cambridge, the rival - Of Oxf" I- .1.. - ­ . . . .: a inting prose until 152ig when John I ... I , I a. atement thel the Paiiit.0 A . . . I I : cat thing of 11 is the fact that no amou ..,.,:.. ­ . I in 1890 it was reduce -the iy for the at I �. . .. 1; .. . . _. 11 . . (I to 16'to . . 1".. . I -1, -1 but Dt. is tie 4 1 OXNLRAL& .. . . of age or familiarity with the Done, -toucher ' . - .- . 1. I ­� . . I 1- . . ss h 4ri e in the city. He main I I I �. ., - .:.' thouland. Its tie Dutch East lnd�ies the wheat, crop, as it appears at press otimstem contain so item arrangement Seems to bargh set up on ra, issuing nine bookS.T. . 4 11 I . . . . best ever seen in the country. - The A alstriats' tained it for two yea, ' ' . . 0 . - � . - I I I ity in 1828 was 176.to the M g rifies. interest in it. .� . - Er ' loss, writin'R on Christm" d 1525, i - ' B. C., 4_--�� -. ', - --., :.I.- European morts, � %noo,uvar, of 2o,00o,000 florins for repeatiD I "n . .. . . - . I I - . -W I in The City Council of Vi i Xt'rwaroi L .. i . .. :, :. later it w" 60; . . , Robert. Aldrich, a te W .1 thousand ; twen �y ye -ars . Monday evening suspended the Chief of k probable that the trou. I from basel too . . I I .. Fjl I � ; � 30, and in 1892, 16, much less police anti t h a Licens inspector as a -ire&, sit . It is� though culm.*1nate iss a general ' IMPURE AIR AND INEBRIETY..- Bishop of Carlisle is quoted by Mr. Allautt - - ..1. N;.? . . - - . . . - 1868 it waj,; . . 'a' I Joddah will . I ,, S&iuta.mihi voteres saidales, . . ; 't-OK - .L _* __ givon before tile Police bit$ at ag:blin§: . . . i� " _ __ . . ­ � � . I nativ( death rate, whioh thou of the evilence . * Joannern giburgum ' . _ I - .� 1 - . than One Bedoni revolL . icolauin._ at . 1. � . . . .. . . - Committee, Which is now investigating ir to I �_ �._ �_ - ofted by I * ._,� L I I 'I., ­ - .� .� to the thousaDd. In the Congo t4 oif.Fraibos are e;asat unlowr Rousarkable V3isea C bibliopolso"' (' to my old ' . . '' ' .1 .. re%ched 2' - . , I 1. -.1. - the working of the police force. The ax and Pau Distric ,Remember me . . _. I . a some of . floodedi by heavy d oval flow. � a r1hysirlau. � rg, the book . I . , f, I . . basin, which. is, o much decried by a Russian Hebrew ,wa rainstorms an - T chums Nicholas and John Sibu I - "I tz;,- . iscoh Barquis, . reported too me,"says Dr, . ." - � I . "A case was . . . - - h rote union - id Dig it, ing su�ams. - . I ioaliers"). - prinied 6' - - IL � -7 - - L ' , 9 .1 is I , �? "".. - , I : our Belkiau frie do, the deat arrested in Tor :Ito On Fir . m nent Now York The monastery Of Tavistock .� ,�-_-. � ��­..�­!.-__ - : ' 1. 11 _. _; en Jn 103 was 70 to the thousand, 'charged with p&ieiqg a forgeKf ohaq is. Paris bankers have concluded a Chinos D. Crothers, "by an 0 i chard, �., - 1. i: whitwm I . . 1i ,;, i:: -� - ..1. stied him, he tin- 4 per cont. gold loan of E16,000,000 physician, of a merchant who tried to book in 1525. " Dan Thom" RY . .,� , ­ - - - - _ - � ­ - . � but this included many men who were When the de4otive �,rre - , ' Monks of the Sayd Monastery," being the . _. ..:- -1 - . - I P� . 1__: _', ' _- --.- -, .-_.� �-__�. ' I L -, ' field,deprived of almost, de&voured to ou't his throat with a pooket guaranteed by Russia. abstain from all U66 of spirits at 'home it issued a second book. - . . . , " campaigning in the ial� wound Ili not dangerous, - . printer; and in 1534 . . �_... I _ �' - knife, Rarqu The Government of Morocco declines to bout guccosa, He worked steadily in a of Comfort, . . L, - . - . . . . � - st isau the Safety of travollarso and wit The first was ,"The Bok ione! _ , .,_ I ­­. .. . �. . every comfort and convenience. At settle In the Militia General Orders ju , guarantee . � . : . .". . ­ � : ; . t - are warned his office and lived in a rich house uptown, called in Isiten Boodue do consolat . . 1. li I _ - ­ - menta like Bonis and Leopoldville, where ermission is granted to the Royal 80044, foreigners going into the interpir sophie;" the second c � . . 1. . . . . - .., IP. � p every condition of healthy Philo 1;�7, . . - _,_ � a the pioneers live in housee,under fairly good of Montreal, to wear the "red hackle" in of this st&Wiof 60&itL_ . where,appa,rently, statutes of the mtsunary, or the charters of - . . . ., . Z . . . I . I . .. . bonne". It 'has been, sip- n tio'nal Miners' Convention, living was'prosent. After several ineffect- 528 the . ­ ,.�_`., . . . .� . _. ianitary and alimentary conditions, the their feather ul isr The later the tioners in Devonshire. In I " . .. ­ I I . posed the-, this honor in the pose ohm - . . ­ - . I - .1 a 32 to the meeting at Kris, has adopted a rosolu- Bat atforts to give up all use Of 90irits, h abbey of Abingdon was honored by J . - . . .1eath r&te, in he same year, wa favor of an sight'hour was set . . 1. - .. 11 I distinction of the famous "Black Watch," tion declaring in . . ford ; which . -went-, out O&MpLog in the White Mountain Sooiar's prools, from Ox . . � I thousand. In �dgeriA the death rate among on whom it was bestowed for spe;is,l . . t a breviar -X I � up . . day. I . a few days all taste forthis up Lhare Ion enough to prin y , � .:i . services in the field. '111 shortly ocs, region. In a momis of the house ; and it, 1534 . .. ...--. _. . . . - .the whites dro )ped from 17 to the thousand . . .. .. J. . . M. Andres of Stockholm, w a for the first time in for th t'. .. .-. I -8 18 to I I i'i 1893 ; and in the Antilles, ' " ' T 1: .. �. - to parim to overviet' the msking of the spirits left him, an - the St. Albane prose ftgLiD began to prin ' ". - 1. �' . " L . , ih I � - GREAT BUTTA IN. L, _ ;�, . ,:. . ... � . �. balloon in which he will attempt to reach twenty year* -he became a total abstainer L � . . -_ - � - ' L ­ from 91 -to 1 ., It is a very poor use of -, j_ `.,.*..,. - The " SoolemaYstse' had g0ma- and John. - . � . ...., - .1 ­ n in - . . . - . � 51, I .. .-. . TherA has been 1% marked imptoveme � the north Pole- "On return to the city he otrank again Herford was meatier Of . . 11 .- . - � I - ... I � . . time and ener y to argue that there Is a Mr. Gladt-tone's health. I orol -to Wong I - ' � . - I - . - . _... _ .-I- . Germans have at' i ad four fol and could not stop' ' The next smal he THR MONARTIMT PREP i. ; , 1� . it's surface - i on the . . . . � _�, it, . _� _.. single k;quar . a mile of the' eart William O'Brien has Issued a fatswIll ing to the rebellious Bakoltatribes, Moved out in the country, and 611 taste for that it ww". , . . . _. ­ - - I � . t some (lay, turn to his ' during meet of the four. % slario . . . .. r, � � :---? which man w 11 no I address to the elootorm of C*rk CitY- -lower Sasage Piver. Two hundred natives - ­ . . . L : . I . . . . . . . . By wounded. spirits left him. Finally,� he gave up hill active. Six books wero'issued' from it, all � - , .: ,_�,, ?% , . �L . ..:.; I dvantage. ,_ . . (I J -1 *­ The Duke and Duchess of York have were 190ileii and ma . . . .-"-;,. . - L � . _­ own a .. . .. - �, - ..".L . ".; - .. . . . t in the 0014 try, M in English - ' . . , , ; - . . I I . . Tha,Spanish Government has announced city residencle,aud.6ved ou of the . ' . . . . - an invitation to visit Australia n w 11-N _' '­�. - L_ . L . - - .- _L___ I . ­ . received e . I .L' . .. , , ­- � - ----------- A. . . �: the estwMngland, is said to . . . ., � ... . . I I ., � , � , , ;1 . '. I � -_- .� 'Its iotention seLding -too additional ta ­� - . . - . . . . next winter. of coming to the city for a few hours to time, Brii0l.in 1646; but no . �o _ . . �. . I.. _; ­ -6 - . .1 - j.l .1 -1. . . w PILA in ba try to Cuba without have bkd a printing pre" in .1:11 ' " . � ­ The Messing of Fnme� � :.. , .k ttallous of inf&u and has Iiiiiasome a total abstainer, not I '_ ' . I I . . :­ % : : ... . I I _. Eighteen thousand troops too book or tract bearing a Bri,stol imprint . - .�, , . T ..: � - . vd IkA to -the review at Aldershot in honor Qf the deln,y,to assist in quelling the, insurrection. to or desire for spirits. It Phing this date is known - In 1534 ,. - ...I.: ; - � �, . - _. - - Old - Bondclipp-Huh I Yoli having any tax approm � �1. -, _. �..:...�,. Dowager Empress of Russia has . in Ipswich, . `4 L �. - rinarry my daut h? What business visit of Naarulla. Ktian. The' told books .- " .. - '. � 41iter, e i . � . -1 , � -, , ,� I-- - .. . :: "I. ar(, you grigaged in, may I ask ? I Maharajah Abubakar, Sultin of Joh Oro, summoned Prof.' Leyden, of Berlin, the seebris moirt rational to suLlipose.that poison- Itioginald Oliver W ' . ­.� a _­ . � . . ... 8 all r. I I am specialist on pulmonary tons. (I air and defective ventilation were the whore not very long before Cardinal ol. . - ­ . I;— Young Odistle-No busines . . who repently arrived in London on a visit, sminent, the Grand Duke . "a of the drink era" in thin say had founded a school; but no prose � . - ­ _­ 1. . I - '_ I * I . - ir. plaintlis,to examine her son, ozoit can _� . I , � . I . I . - _. . ... - infinitely abuvenord . id trade,.s T I'm a died on Tuesday evening. - , I f ca".110 other. condition of surroundings existed there until 1547, when no fewer . I- , __ - I mtly appoint,41 by Gooria. than three printers were at work. They ' ' . I . - . 7* .­ ­ .1 . .. � ., poet. a Herbert Spencer, root L - . �. . I , .. , q r'. ive heard, Merely I 061t. Very favoirable Ldvicem have be -0 ro- and living COUIA explain his ability to stop . - - L 1-1 '. Yes so I h I � Emperor William a Knight at the Order ot in the were Anthony Scoloker, John Overtonivand ' - * � , . . - . ... ' St. Petersburg regarding the drinking in the country and D d - : � . . - . . � _. :: ." �,� L , -'._ L .. Mer'ely, sir ? Nly poems, air, have Orough of Merit, has declined the proflered oeived in , John Oswen. - The first and the last name I . . - .. , . I . definite satMement of the cit I . I ,..,..L _. I—— ��. me fame. . . honor. I Prospects of a . e. - L - . . ;­ . _r ai�e, eh ? I .. to que4tiotim remaining in dispute between the Lother in olident, welli* verified, Seemed printed in English books by Luther, M .- . I . . . .. Yes, so I have been told. F . Dr. Murray of Edinburgh, Oromiseg hth�n, Calvin, and other reformers, and � - . �' --- . , .... . - - ...; I . .. - t arnoull't of incom d th t fain -a and Japan. . to, bring out the same fact : A deliuste, )&DO ch �, L - L.: It'. I - . .- *�.­ And wha I Is . a send the published report of the Challenger POw" hild ot, 6 years. supposed to be must have been busy, as they left 1pswi . e 00 ­ .. L i �.- , I..- _.- - represent ? . Riaters have dastr�ayed the French nervous o . Osweox went to Worcester, where . _�..4. I.- .. . I , - , :�:. . biia�d bills expedition, 50 volumes, as a gift to 1,110 rican inclined to consumption, was guarded with in 1548- ..- , I ,-Z - � - ­�_- . 1: . . Weil, air, I have paid -my I Catholic and th6 English and Ame monopoly of printing r6ligious- - . . "I . �, - _ . . Lopdon Public Library. Ids and the he had So ". - . ... , t - � a. extraordinary care against 90 �� 1. . ­ _� .-. . - as they came d ue, and I owe for only one i - i i, Z - -1 .. - . Nasruila Khan and him suits Atteaded - Protestant MiAsiODI at ChoUgLU &8411116 . r, in a rich city home.. At 15 years books for Wale*, and there, between 1548 . LI -A. �, - I .T �, f clothes, the one I have on. I a safe, refuge 0 D at - . .. _1�� . ! - ­. � _.- . - .., I suit 0 . - I - '! . - . . � , - 0 . Ir - - rvices in the h1ohmninadan I The missio�naries were given � his a . .. -1 Just what 1 expected� N w, religious me or .. a strong talsw for spirits developed and 1553, he printed three additions of th ­� - - . .. " Exact,ly. tt Nvokjag on Tuesday in honor of I by a native. officials. L no of the "Boke of . - ­ ­ _ . . .., _ ebriate. His mother Bible, and four edition - � " ­_, L_ _ __ - . . �. An I ad at 20 he wan an in _ '. . , , - . . -: - �. � what good has your fume done yo ? - moisque a � " & I The Turkish Government hais promised a a Praisr," and �Venteen other re- _. I -4� _� !'y . - . . -, � me tl,at. . I the Moslem feast of Bairam.. entatives of the powers that full died and he was forced to go into the Commo d admonitory books. - - - �, ,f _i,i . ': swer , b. ligiOus 60 ;,.. ­ ' - ' ., 1-.� _- - L . - �- � ....� I - gave a the repres He became a totsil a _ 11 .:: - .� * .daugh Is . v country to live. _,, � ­- I ­ I ..; . - It made ine acquainte,i with yt,u The Mayor of - Soatham 1 t6u n for the outrageous John Mychell printed Protestant as well It ­ 1. - , I �_� - .1. . 411� 1 :: ,. -1 , ­; been for my 'ame we luncheon in horlor of the officers . . . f : of the Asitistecitinu W"' be 1 a stainer at, onoe and is now, at 26 years, a 1i hl�­ .. _ 1: -i ter, air. If it, had no . - - k, . 15341 .-; _. . .:. have met. and if we had not United States and Italian warships I, 7, the behaviour of the furk)ah gendarmes a . b strong temperance man. It would as Roman Catholic books at Canterbury - . � ".. - . � V�_� - I . � ... . never wouH aflp"' between 1549 and 1556, in which latter .. ­ -, , * � Moosh. ' ition of and I V ._-, I _.?� �� Southampton waters. . that in this case some could . , I . o 1. met she never would have pro iaed to protabot of a London. . . _ez 0 . - In the I typical gathering of year he went to � . - _ . it� - illy, by book or y oroQk,. that �jsmcar tinsue starvation began from defective .. - I �r� __ , - *:., - marryme, willy n It in reported in London 6, Queen Marygranted a �". , ' g"I's I . � Students of all the German universities on On May 4, 15.5 1. V'. ­ - - - - . ...., I ­ - - -?onsent - .� .9.1 ". *1: '.. , .� ..... wi.ether yoi, ed or not. . WildAo who was recentil sentenced two -6 Monument Of aeration and continued until the surround- charter to the still existing Stationers"Com- . ­� .. - � .1� � . . .., . *1 -_. .� -:� r li. Saturday the foundation of in changed. I ',� . I . - . I � - _ . �.! Uffl-ahem-well, I conserit. : . ­ . years' imprisonment in pentonville riso' n .laid at - - . . - I :" �­ : 11 , _. . - - ­ _. � Prince Bismarck as a student was I ' ' � - . . . .. - .. , , nd is . - 'pany. which gave to it and to the univerei - :V1 W '. �. : I �. I �_.`___.­ rd labor,.has become insane, think the poison from the defective and Cautbridge a practicai -� 1 ­ 1�� _. . , . � ­ - _... 1 . . . -ha ties of Oxford _ . :1. at . 1�..,­_ 1;, . .. - . a. * oxidation of the blood, together with im. : " �, i. 11 _.. � :­ , � ­ _. �.- .,. ! - I �.,. , AndelatIurg. near Kosen . ,T . - _:...'�.... , "� ., . - - �. I , . . I ,-.--,` : confined in a padded room of the pri a tremendous oloud-httrst 3,nopoly of all printing in gngland. After -.,.,; �, ,1� .- ... . - , � .� .. . Thato was perfect elimination of wasite products, is a 014 ; �:, . 1- I . _. .- - .. ., . : ­ I .- . . ,.. . --. . 1, . . . � . . Smil,11 Soldierg., '�11 � - we of - Tliiu aday over the Wurtembarg porti6n of the i 4 ..:. ). _. I.. � -1 - ­ I . .��'_�.._.. I 11 - _1 _ � , .. . -1 �_, , .; .�:. . . ". I The London Daily Ne very active factor in inebriety. In all the grant of this charter pr uters had to be al I . _.. - ' ., I ­ ­...._', aid no ambers of the - I .. ,�4 M P: - - - . had an �rticle asking why the Pre London and in i .. -.1 - - - - . ' * " ,,, ­_. . � . _,' 1-1 Thia Venezuelan people are of :�Wort at*- ut Of Black Forest on Wednesday. Many he so rational troatment.efforti to remove these freeman 'Of . L, . __ - .,:, �' ­ . . )OMPAny. I 6, the prov .4 .�.,: I I . , , I L". * wh al a ad, and on - vay. Thirty-two persons n cousequenc incial, ': � -, . - � - .1 ­ -.:.: -,.� �­_ a 6 Republic cannot go abruad, and on goat were swept a. possible causes should precede all other I __�� 11 .. .. .. I - .. - . L� .r. Wre. A Br,tish functionary re- . g that if the Presidents -of France and were drowned, and nine are missing. of England became silent; and for - -, .1 .. . : " � '_,�.... L� ini means of treatment,. The continual inhals- press �� _ ... I . 1. o logitirmate�publioationm isiu- - `1 . . . . r . . . . , . . N .1 . cently capti �ed by a body of V nezuelan United States were to vi it Engl ad it � V, I I : the The Republic of Formosa han colla d LIWSYG fhan5 yowl' a _"' �,:., _:�, 11" tion of itapure and defective air is i 1;1 4 v- . . :.� L . ­ ... L riandly f aling the island: ad from what had had so promking a be- ;_ ,"CO - , e_,�. �, . a has'Jent anadcountof th incident would tend to increase the f its President has stooped from followed by the accumulation of poin,ine I I �.I; , � ­ �1� aroop . . . , �� , . I I.,... ��! .. "i - I � , . . .1 I he says: between the respective oountriSL A L, ­ to the Pall dall Budget, in whic and the foreign residentis there are ill which, in many ways unknown, cause ginning. : .. I . . ... I - - . . f- �-�_ ­ __ . 1 , . I . - . . , , � , . , � - - I �'.. a Thomas Don, Son of a farmer livlug At safety. The native and China .. I - - . . " , � , . - - - .L _ �:_ "You can magine my feeisn g w en,look- so soldiers, refle.% nerve disturbanoeeL and reatitions. ,., . 1_1.'�._11_ I .....� _. �.. . . - - - � LIVely Expe6tatiOn. ': - I- ; - .01 0.._ . _. ;. . . fr m my height of 6 f a t on some Crieff, was arrested on his way to Bat raoral however, are said t;o - be looting 'in All The heart contracts more frequently, res- -, ; -, I . I - . - 2 I , �­ I "I .1-1. 1. ing down fr I f I— . - - ith the Qaeon rated and elaboration a - � 11 X .. . - interview w - direoLions. _, T11 ': � I � .: " of the ven(zuelan looters abouti 4 feet in to obtain an . 11 . piration is sociele f five Years, who was very ,,­ �& �'_. ' L - � L ­ - . . . 1. . . �. . __ , _, I SAW them PaffiDg away at my He had in his pocket A paper headed 41 To . . - '. A little boy a ­­ - . , A. . I . ,�, . ... . . _. I � .:-' height, Advioes rooeived in Parts from Aptan. nutritive material in altered in all the fond M abowed mushrooms, and who had � - , ': .. IPAI - - LTi � Xek . . - - ­ . t one the Queen," and a letter addressed to Mr. a i it.ought .. I � . . . . . . I i� � I_ ,.�..: cigars, while 1, in self, could q ansrivo, Island of Madagascar, say that the cal of the body. Fatigue, depression an the idea -which in commoner thai .. �_ :, . . . I I Ili I . . I.-.- .: . - .:1 I : "_ . : smoke.'y I Gladstone, in which the writer mid h i was Fronah advance into the intotiOr has been lowered Vitality follow. Alcohol at this to be -that mushrooms are the wbrk of ,� �, .- �.. -1 ; - ... . Of them to . � "_ - . I .. . i- :1 ,�� .. ­ �­ ­ �._ - _.: about to become' Kir;g - of Britain. Sit and that like mortality anitong tilne is a grateful narcotic, which not only t,o with � - . . _ � , __1 : - I � - . . .­.. I . .. , - � repulsed, ' ads, was found sitting on the lawn _ - L ­�.!�, ,�, � . . . - I . �:_­ . . I I " J,. , . - . 1-. - _1 I -1 ­- and but briuqa his e :­ - 11 � ... _ _. � . -w _ _i: ! � -i- a of his revolver were loads , coals the - real condition - �7_- �-, �, � .. ., , .­ - 1, ll - 1�-.. -, chamber I I - L: , . � the invading troops from fever is inoraw- Con I es fixed intently on the ground. 1 ''. - ' ...­. .,..:. � " _.�L ­'­:�'�: � ;�,­"�P_-�' .11 . I 1_ � . � - . � - - '. . - - I � �.: , . ,., �, .., f_i, . 1. . . . - inoreamed degeneration with ow bacteria - ,j ... I . - .i- . I Idges In a " n WM are you waWhing ? his mother in . . _ . , I _. ­ - . .. he had besides 50 oartr b1`9 in . i I . . . � - I - : e_. I . :;!. , - - . Ir I I � .1 ­ - English Coppers . �W .,� - and dimin6hed resistance to . -: 'ZIP - .. .1 ­.. _. - 1: : _�. �__ �_ ,- Mo � - Miss Elizi, Wastey, for forty years argan- $he Duke of Anhalt, Cormany, oelebrat. formations quired. I - I . '' :�L...­'.' . ­ . . __.�­ ... L .. . I �� . . " ­ - . - - � . - I , ' vous ,system .F . �1 - ,_ : - � . _ ­ 1. - Anew isone 0 -is I . Marg*reG day iocently � The little fellow raised his finger W ensure t : . I . � . f copper oc�isi a- K by establishing a disesisla.. The brain slid nor ., I .- -_ �, ist of St . Puttens, Rood lane, ad his birth L .. . .... - . . �: ­. . .. . I L �'r­ .. )f the I . ,� � _., - . I . L _i., � . _�_` I -1 I I �.. , 'Inside in England to bring out neon Via- London, haoi just diod. She W& tilso d000rs,tion for working moo. Every tabourer ouffers as much an any other part ( silence. . _� ".. � . - 1. ... . . I 'body, although this is not rieclognized. . o, t6ad ho alors94-. L' .. 4 ::�. - . . � 1 ­ . . . � 1. L I I ' :. I - I ­ _'.. toria's titl -of Empress of ,tpdia. The granddaughter of Charles' Wesley 1 the in his dominionit who has been twenty-five- . 8h I he pidd, I saw p . . �t,:� � 1". . ­ - :, . 4 - � . . .. .�. I .. . , - ­ . ­.- as on the olA coins,. the h,ymn writer, and daughter of the con poser- years in the employ Of ths "MO person or . here, and I'm waiting to see a brushr000l i. . .. I . . I � ­:-__,:�.. reverse is I tie some 1 - . . - . - .. . � :, �, Tfine for Reflection. -, .. 1. . 1. �_ - figure of B -itannia masted, but ihe obverae of the Oathedial Service In F. Sh) Was firm is to pot a silver modal. - _- � "I . . spriog up. � . .; _. - - ­ - r . . . . . ..* . -�-, -7 t, - �.__��. ! '. F'1`1r� _:1 � _ � ", I ." .. " k, _ ,_ , . .1 . I . ; . .- . . . - _* � I � . - w ­ -1. . . . L � _.� .. . . .. . ­ .*. .1 i ,4 �". - . .., Xitity-Jovok says he will sto dr ­ � � 2 1 . - . .,. � , - I w head of the Queen, with the in- edacated an a musician by her fath4 r sad I . iakiig . ; , - ,. __ I � _ - . - p I ... ... - � - . . - - . . Z - � sane . , , L �. � I. . - ­ � .. - -i - . ! . I . , . � .� 1. - .--- _ .. - ._ L"wWomplish ent4t , It I will hlf"* . ­. . Hardly True. - . - :., ._ � ­: �__ . After You. 01 I - � _ , , . t .. He Conus . . � . '. - . � �. w . d 7ictoris Doi Gra. Bril t. Regina was a lady of many L: I �.�,__ � - . - _ I scrip sun . ' , Jansis marry .. ' .. ` � : -, "' � � -;, - . , 113�'._ 1 � � . - . I - . I , - I -1 1: '1% ., ,_ �:, L' Fid. Def. Ind. Imp., 11 by thd Grade of Mendelssohn, Braham, the poet Rogers, ar t...nWellsi be - carefUll My. door. It's Fither-.My son, no man: ever '&000 .. .. , .1 , � . .. . _. I -Deah Milman, and many othfIrs celebrities Utions-Is it correat to precede ths, fath . , * � Z. '' I .; 1?1 - - - - : �­�.. : God, Qaee of the Britaina,defonder of the r fiancoo dowusta,irs.1- L' . .. , I sissior f0i hirn'to be I aillAhim itlis for ed at his, work, - , � � , �. ­'. . .11, f On .1 � L '. L plished much who talk . . . j_.. � . . . . - -k .- . -4 � I - mo .'" - L . I - %_ � � - 1, '. . , , . ' I I , - ,- -� _:�- . 11 L � f&lLh, 1�mpress of India." Thiinsoription of the early Victorian period . w L ore I kniong 0 nrAlans..�_V6 _. I - . '. - .. . . - t 744mariZen . � I .,. _ . . Son -How about a lawyer,, dtd I , q - . . .1 . I � . I— - __ Z _ r ry,of too you havb� W. Zs: I YOW to.0111 , _ .i I � " -1 . . I -.:. _. . ­�, - F; - ­ - L. 1* -I � .. __1. F . Ireibd-e on- the lzl,ld and silvQ0. coins. . her friends,,... I ­ . I _,*L1',._ '.. ___ , rx .A�!;,. . f ' .'L , I .�,� - �, I I ­ . _..V ,!r � lil_.. I... �:. - . L.- ­ .� - - . ­ " ...,:, I I - - is M I . � -1. .1 � ­ L " :� L L . - " � ., .� . , � . I � . , , � . ­ '. I .1 . . . L .1 . ,; L : _,��.�. ' 1. , X'A - S, z*v tv.� "', . . . I ­ - . � � - I - . . . .. . .1. , - I . fi" .1 k I ,I �- , : . I . - I I - - - .1 �. I - . .�. .- 'r I r , .. . . ­ I I I . -, 1. ­ _ I _ L. � .� ;0_�,? - - , - .. .., . , . � I ­ "P . ,2 . � - 1. i . � � � . ' I - . .. I . �. il I ,. I 'A - ... !,. "� , ,�Ak! . - . : . - � - .1 -, - - . L � . I 1. - - I , , � , -i . - ilflo P _ __ � ­ . . ._� . j. I.., . I I �--�. k ' - I . - I . . . &,mv - � . . . I . - . L � I . .1 I . -lil '!)12K ' - L - L' . � - ,;;; ., , - I ­ � . .. 4.:F,�.,.­,t _ .;41- ­ ,1% - 11 , , , � , , , .. ­ ''' , : , : . '� , , ; V. . . . L R��F'. . . . � . . - - _�_ .1 ­ - ' ' ' L' . . . I 11�1 _, , "" � L�, , . _r � ' I ,; i 4 rtji'J�j ' I - . LL L I " I . . � * I � - i 11 _ _ � . . ;- - :-f - . I .. � . . . . ,W _ . � _' . � . . I " I I ­ ­ :: 'L ' , . .. - - , ._�, - IL ­ � I . . . , I , : � .: . . * !� . .:: , , ., _.�� r_ , , ., ,� I - __ . .. � �' ... _� . 1. N� - - I , . -1 . ;! .� I. . J�! * s- I- � � ­ ..._. I ". ! .. . 'r - , , � ;' -1 - I . f - . . L, ... �j! � _ . , 'L , , - , ­.. ,� . . .. . - � -�- I a -,, , ,-'* " 1 - �:. , � � -1 - �' , i . � -..- I 1: , , , - � � a. _. Z IT- I . - � _,.�,�� _. I .1 -1 - -- !_ , , . ­_V,� � I . � ..� ,I �." '. L , 'I'- � . - ­ _� .,'. . - I ; � A* 11, - 5 :.. � ! - . . . : . I . - . :. " L . . - I � ��: . � . � _ , _L � . - I I - - - - ::. � I,' : �. ' _; " . � '�­�'�,] I r ii', :1. I . �.­ I .: , 'I" . .,­ _': - . . - I ­ , ... . : , - , �. . � . _% - , : � ' �� . ,_,.� .. 11 , , L �.'� ' L - ' . 1 , , - - :,, . .4-g ., 1. I I t.. I . , .. �. - - � ,.. . � 1. - ­. � L .. I r t ,1111 � ._­ xi . ­ . % I . . ­ . _,_­,� I I - . - `V. i ­ . � 't tUA1_,;;,,' I L ..- I - . , � . - .. ­ � . . - I � - . . ­ , . . 1, . I . 1. � - I ... ­, - -, . - I .1 - :1 I 11: ; . , . - � _4 � . . I - - L - . ; � ­ . . . _,�,, r , - ' , . . , , �,_ . 'L I - ". . - � - " � - -1 �. .t . . -f L . ' _ L* r . - '. . � . . � L ,.", I .-I I - " 1 � I . . , � , - - - ��' *, _ ; . - �.' - ; , - ­!! _. -, A— ... ­ � , -r ?'� " ,,,, . , . 1- 4 - t__ I � -, � I __ . _ _ , _ - , - - I :'' I .t R ,� : . I— 4 ... . r �, .� . - , .. . .- - � . � 4, . _..o .-1. , -, � '. , Z. ill - ... - L � L !�,gn __,q L . I .. ., - I., 1� . - , .1 . Z - 11 : , , ? ,��? � _ , _, i_ _ , , , , � f . I . . . . P.: . . .: _- '. , I , - _ , _ .,. � Tx. I . . :, . . _ �, , I . ' . -­ , -;i,�, _ , 'r . , �*` , . . � , . �_. . . . . - �.. , � 11 � L I . _.: � ,� � .L!" , ­ -1 . _ . . __ -1. . . . . "p, , _ , I -­ "I - ..., - �- . ,- , � ''. - 1. . .�.* .... _. . . .. .� I Ntili ;'XI - L . - I 1� I �" - F. - I , I ­ - �. .:�� __ , . . . . 4.Npli. , 1; , L _ .1 . 1. . -1 . I I "I �: A: ­ - '_­:��t..­_-;�-_k� -J,, -�,Jh--M,W"l x'. "� �v-­�t ] a k -. i � - g ii��, ­ , . ..�', � 4'. _,6,,,_A_ .it- :.AA , "; f, . _ � ,�� . , �,� . rV y -,..- . " 11 I - .. - , . 1, I . 11 11 . .. . t., * � � - ..t W f - . .. , ,^ V 1'. _ _i s' 4 S- t 1 T�i t f" �,_ 1 I� c a �F . ;� _ 1 1' �" 5 4 } �x �- Y j } •R s -1 k L u t.: r. ' - +G ...°t -i: `'' ,- NOTE AND 001113fMY 0: - -� - .� - . . ,t- whim.As : i0yels was mainly ai� .instru- I'ment of spot it bad its uses to ihI nom i munity, but it was not -a thing of public - consequence. Plow tient its sporting men fare quite s ondary to its practical em• ployment, i influence and effect upon life, charac rand material progres>. are R . worthy of usideration. Its betlefits are many and gr .Now that horses have ceased to so a at it there are praotioally - no offsetting ' . tions whatever.; It does . - nobody any . atm, unions it be the home. dealers. It a oys nobody and inoommodes nobody whe properly used. It adds ab. solutely no hing to- the sum total of unneeessary noise, the elimination of which is the chief problem of civilization In cities., the other hand the bicycle is Greatly ben fleent. It ie tsaohitrg men : - anew the ses of their mn�oleo, It is _ - rescuing th by tens of thousands from their slavia dependence upon others for :.I the'meana o getting about. it is teaching . them to rely upon themselves for locomotian. . . �• - . The bicy le is inducing persons to take exercise w o- have hitherto :sluggishly . :. neglected t use their limbs. It is taking - - them into t free open air,pumiling breath into their lungs and rich, -'r`ed blood t, • - through t sir veins.. It is oompelling them to ret their jaded minds too—to . recreate th maelvain. For while. the man who morel Welke may drrg his tiresome' - tr&in-of the ght after him, the an on the bicycle mus c trend strictly towhat he is ,. doing and f 6he time forget tl)¢ oarking . - cares that eary the mind and, wear ou . vitality. • _ I�`I ---- I �- I To wome the bicycle is ev114 more' a benefactor than to men. More than men's their lives ave been shut up in hot rooms, while more than men they r eed'the nerve- . - - building, bl od-making influence of exec- . mee in the pen air. , the bicycle is doing - - more `than ll the sports combined to induce women to r ch exercise, and the next gen- .- �\ - - - . eration of n will by the better mothered because th young women of to -day are . . learning to ove a wheel. . $yetpria, head• - - ache nand ne ves have been suerlul ies in the . - rear of the hnman race ever since civilize - tion made he mistake of shutting women - . - np in luzu cue houses and ezc sing them, - from the bl using of work vers i,ty, under _ the absurd isconception that t o sentence . -. pronouaoed upon Adam and ve was a • curs*. T e bicycle is render ng women . another gra tly good aerv'ce. ITt ie te- - ing thorn t' a badly neede lea on that- rn " Lhe-matter of.clothed it i fitn ss and not .- .'convention hat determine corn liness and. - propriety. The bicycle suit i s .minister of grace an postle of common tense in the matter of omen's dress. It . in no way. . ; oppnaea ski �s ;h their proper; place. It merely teao e8 women to adapt; their dress . always tote conditions do be et, which - ie ..he Crab spel of all c;osturr iing.. The .. woman wh pats on a bicyoW suit for a - spin will no he likely to drag a train- after . ' her over irty. sidewalf s whgn she goes : •shopping o to dispense with the graceful _ sweep of th train in her own pprlors. +_! . - The bio cle 'is a miaaiopa p of Rood roads. It kes many Mt ,n in o -the coup- -. try who wo ld otherwise never learn the - _: joys of mee ing nature face to, face. The - . • increasing housands of tourist wheelmen see teachin the ooun4 peoppa in most prt►ctieal w ys the. ad+antageJ of making - ` their_ road ays .good, . and th a inviting travel fro which thly reap a harvest. The when men are growing numerous enough to be themselves a controlling majority the making up ''of public _ opinion, an to pub any man up�n a bicycle : is to make f that man'st once an ardent :.. . I advocate of good roads. No outer modern . : device has t once so many points of advan- ' tags to the public and so few points os. passible public objection -as the bicycle. - Let the wh is R^ round t t - - i_ i s to Snake BiteI • i That'no. es9 than 23,000 people shouh . have peril ed last yeas' �n theIIndian pro - Vince of Be ngal from snare bittbp shows hove little prog sae hue been l mads by eoienw toward the discovery of some ;antidote foi the poison f these reptiles. 7I'he trouble . . is that the poison of nearly every specie) seams to a eet a different, organ of the - , body. Tl s the Hite of a cobL% seems ti paralyze th lung, while the daboia pro duces tern ble convulsions. From time immemori physicians of every' clime ane - ace - have devoted their energies to thi . - - discovery f cures for these 'bialys ; but i judging fr m the heavy list'of easualtis I 1 from this s urce alone in Pengal, the mos' highly civil'zed province ¢¢e�nd possessed o Y the best ay tern of medroil supervision o all pluglish olonial dependencies, it woul( seem that a l efforts in this direction have - - been aborti e. . - Efieet of Fire on Steel Beams. � ( A recent re in Toronto showed the fsta _ effect of fi e upon steel beams in non -fire l proot struc urea. The building was of briol I and wood nd the walla above the first ntor, i. ) . rwere supp rted on heavy steel giruers When the re broke out the beams became softened b the heat, and the building col lapsed_. ooden beams would have stool much bet . They will last until almos - - burned aw y, while metal often become useless fr m mere heat without , boinl touched b the Saltiest. • ,, ; r:- ,i , r L t. .I :., may, 7 L *;_p. 4 k€i -a F� A r: �s i iJ 1 'x 3 i 4 f � I` .'..tr A .1 h . Y v' 8 f , a } f w 4R � I: -,-'- _. F' M S' L, 4" :ten .e� , r a s Y . N. �} Y Y,- _. ..per. >. �. .a •' AA L C' R•� . 4 . -i' - .� s +�`. r.. max. u"'• _ t e- e� x ��v- a -st ±es.7. <_-._.r,ka��£3z-� _N5'• ..C$5; �. JW. t-• �����..SU.' �. 4:v;+"F' r Kr -: y� a a4k yy '?7 J R" �r• 1- ` i r ., 1' I ti t- '�t s i .S u - h i h M i L L fi r L •a a` 4 � 7 _ 4 . 3 s L S . f W } ,I Y t • r fi ^i R 4 Y .r' 4 Y r a� tib Y Y re, 4 *" ITHIRTY YEARS - QF TORT(JPX HANIM AND- . FIhTGtR8 T'STED PUT OF SHAPB WITH RHEU- XATISIi. • ' L: ImO Story erOka *lel )Bali New Ifearlsg the Feet et Life's ■Ili -New Belief Vame to Nlm lifter llepeated Failures and Db. appolulments. !from Kemptville Adv`auos.' . I !: .. - "I am now almost at the foot of tate hill of life, having attained the 78th year of my age,and neverduring thattime have I made a statement morewiliingly and oonscientions- ly than now. My body has been tortured by pain for upwards of thirty years,causled by rheumatism, and there are thousands enduring a like afliiction that seed not if they would but heed my experie.nos and avail themse'ives of the propel• paeans of 'relief. The disease first affected my Mp and spread to my legs end arms. Like marry sufferers I spared neither trouble nor ex+ pense in seeking something W alleviate the pain. -The disease had made me so helpless that .I was enable to pat on my coat and my hands .and fingers were being twisted out of shape. There seemed not the shadow of a hope of relief and very naturally I became disoouraged and - die - heartened, and time after time have I Riven up in deepa►r. While in Arizona three years ago I heard of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. ' I sent for six bozos in order to giv,s-thorna fhirtrial. I'followed the di- rections closely and by the time t:he fourth box was finished the pain had greatly les- sened and I. was •much improve3. My I WA8 IINABLic TO PIIT 0`i Iiy OOA% I friends having witiov"ed the wonderful effect upon my body could not help admiring the Pink Pills, and being about to leave for the east, I gave the re- maining two boxes to them. Unfortunate► I neglected getting another supply fol nearly a year after returning to this part and I telt that to me Pink Pills wart one of the necessaries of life. Last sprint•• I pruoured a few bozw and have been taking them sines with a very satisfactory effect am. glad to soy. Now I feel like a new man entirely free from pain or stiffness of joint, I have a slight numbness of feet and half way to the knese,but am confident that these pills will relieve this feeling. Although well stdvancid in yeara.I am able and do walls many miles a dad For' rheumatism pr. Williams' Pink Pisla stand pre-eminently' above all other medicines. so - cording do my exaperienoe and I urge a trial on all suffering from this painful malady." The above is the Unvarnished stat�Irrlerit of facts as told the �ldvanoe recently by -Mr. George Selleek, an esteemed resident of Miller's Corners, and no one hearing the earnest m ner of its recital could fail to be oonvine6d of Mr. 3elleck's sincerity. But -if this weret not enough hundreds of witnesses oould be summoned, if need be, to prove the truth of every word stated. Mr. Angus Buchanan, the well known druggist and popular reeve of Kemptviils, speaks of Ur. Williams' Pink Pills as one of the most ppopular remedies known, having a Arent sale among bis customers ar d giving general satisfaction, Rheumatism, soiatioa', neuralgia, partial paralysis, locomotor ataxia, nervous head- ache, nervous prostration and diseases depending on humors in the blood, such as scrofula, ohrewic erysipelas, eta,, all dis. a r before. a fair treatment with Dr. illiame' Pink pills. They hive a healthy glow to pale and• sallow complexions and build up and renew the entire syetesa. gold by all dealers or sent postpaid at UM. a bot or six boxes for $2.50, by addressing the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brookville, Ont., pr Sohen*ctady. N. Y. Don't be persuaded to take some substitute. 7 . . Salt Treated Eleatr1 Ball y. - It is well known by chemists that caustic -sods card be produced by passing a ourron i of •electricity through common table salt. The salts which i■ chloride of sodium, sep- arates under the action of the current into sods and chlorine, either of whioh by itsell is much more valuable than the salt from, I which it is produced. The . process is i simple_ one, and not expensive. The salt it • dissolved in wo,ter acid a current from s I dynamo is passed through the solution, . Metal plates are placed to the salt water mind -attached to the dynamo wires. Chlor• I ine is set free at one pole and caustio sods I at the other. The great difficulty, however, I is that chlorine disaolaed in water is one of I the most powerful sol ents known. Almost all metals are dissolve by it. liven carbon, I one of the most unsol ble of substances, ie ` rapidly attacked by chlorine and wears ' away quickly. Thio souliarity of chlorine interferes with the co eroial prAoticabil' I ity of the process. o substance has yet been discovered .for t, a electric terminal's which will stand the ■train and yet be oheap I enough for manufacturing purposes. , - { Wx►en a Dane Gets Drunk. : This is the way the police in Denmark deal with the drunks, ds found helpless in I the streets. They d ive the. patient •in- s oab to the station here he sobers off I : the * they take him ome. The cabman r makes hie+ charge, the police doctor makes his. the. agents make heir claim for special I duty,and this blll is p eagnted to the land. : lord of the establishment where the drunk. I and took.. the last glass that did the li business. No wonder {hat certain landlords , protest slaying that proofs are insufficient I and some alleged victims shunt iatOXWAlWi v to `et tie landlord into trouble. . e_ t- • I - k I �- . I i'. F r S — -,£• . - � I ; . rr . r �S H� 4 n. } S -'f t- to N f `1 m a . --i 'f N. .. Y �, , �.� � �sxr„yy�R ,7 a� t „°. T 3 'i s 4 J' ,� d it t w3. ) <i - Y d 1 du• 'moi . 1 - -'S F .~3 t .s'i^ F i g�� ask • .; �� lot iY .tb r ,• 5 l �r W •3 _ 79r,� , 6 fi �r i� < 1c �' 4 a _ "1 x r .I - . : _ r -. . 8 l , Whole Family is Crazy...:. An enure family of seven were taken Into custody in Cleveland the other day - charged with inanity. The family consists of Henry Buohwold, the father I Charlotte Buohwold, his wife, and two grown daugh- ters, Eva and Emma, and three small ohit- dren, All the members of the family are stropg believers in the spiritualistic faith, and have been looked in their home at 3 Beaver street, for over a week, holding wild. ly insane spiritualistic seances. One of the daughters is laboring under the halluoins. tion that she is a s irit, and another mem- ber of the family that the spirit- must die. The spirit was perfectly willing to be sacrificed, bat the arrival of the sheriff's officers prevented them from carrying out their •insane ideas. . 1 A Queenly Head cart never rest on a body frail irom.disease any more than the lovely lily caw grow in the sterile soil W hen Consumption fastens its hold upon a victim, the whole physical structure oommenoq its decay. At such a period, before the disease is too far advanced, Dr. Pierce's Gulden Medical Discovery will arrest and cure it. Send 6 cents in stampl for a Book (160 pages) on Consumption and its cure. Address World's Dispensary Medical Assooiation, Buffalo, N. Y. • . anon used, . Dr. Pieroe's Pellets fire always in favor. Specific for constipation, piles, biliousness. and headaches. • �=- -•-- dust Expiate Their Crime. rmenian girls who reach the age of 17 wit ut being engaged to marry some one h av to fast for three days and then live on salt fish for a fourth day without drinking any water. , I i. . Nlcotintzed Nerves. ; en old at thirty. Chew aced sinoko,eaft Litt e, drink, or want to, all. the time. N vn tingle, never satisfied, r nothing-'@ b*a tiful, happiness gone, a tobaoco-satur- ate system tails the story. There's . an ens way out. No -To -Bao will kill the ner e•oraving effects for tobaoco and make yo strong,vigorous and manly. $old and Igo ranteed to our* by Druggists every- wh re. Book. "Don't Tobacco Spit or Sm ke Your Life Away," free.. Ad. Star• lin Remedy Co.,374 8t. Paul St.,Montroal. How many people live on the reputation of vibe reputation they might have made.— Holmes. - - Qat Rid of Want) 2,L. . There is so ase int feeling with neuralgia. It to a disease that rives way- only to the • sheet powerful remedies• No remedy TTel discovered has given the graskA results thal invariably attiends the empioymoni•-of Pol- son's Nerviline. Nervilrne i• a positive ."ii.0 far all nerve pain, aid ought be be kept on band ist every family. $old every where, `26 cents a bettls. At Florence last week a man aged 74 married a woman ag^d 52 -+ I Was Oured of Abeumat;tism in Twenty 1rour Hours. I, Georg* English, shipbuilder, have iivedlln Cha ham, N. S , over forty ysar.l. Last spring I to k @ever* paint is my knee, %. utch, com- bin with @welling, laid me up for six weeke, dur ng which time I endured great suffering. I ss. South Atnerinan Rheumatic Care adver• tlKe in the Chatham World and procured a Lott e. Within tw*etr-four hours I was ab tolu Aly free from rheumatism, and have not tion troubled with It since. e who is.in evil is also in the pu'nirh. the t of evil.—Swedenborg. • Charlatans and Quaotr.. Ha lea ed their vooatiea os. 'she sat• fer`a p a of the people. The knife has per l W the quick ; oatustie applications la unstented the victim of corns until tke ooavlotion shaped itself—there's as truce. Putnam's Painless Qora IREWSAWr proves on what @leader basis public opinioa often rata. It you suffer from oorns got the B.xtiraoter and roe will be satLlks,& Geld everywhere. , Guelph has -a young ladies' baseball club called '�MoGintys." ftep . ---70 M akin ap a Deflate" , Hultb Drink at Small Cast. 's Root Best BstsacL-..»..,..oleo botl� sohtnamiWo Yeast...... e.... -.--.half a soft • .•., u.....ew-.. M..6" poawk ewattss Aatier...L..............Iwe 0* sugar toad ?date to the tuft eoww% and boWlet place In a wasyi lust twestytoeer bourn unOU It torn t lns e av four w� to w>tti poen ap.trl[dt��s 1 �1 a 04ub ui ae w - I - - _ /est Shore Through S1'eeping Car to New York. , • . One of the handsomest sleeping. oars that has ever been turned ouch of the fao- tory is now running from Toronto to New York without change via the popular West Shore route. It is a buti`et ; oar, and re- freshments can be obtained on route, it desired. This car .leaves Uniou Station, Toronto, every day except Sunday, at 4.59 p. m. reaching New York next morning at 10.10 a. m. On Sundays the sleeper runs from Hamilton only, connecting with the through train from Toronto. Call at any Grand Trunk office . in Toronto for information or space in this sleeping car. Reservations can be made in advance if do. tired. • catarrh—fin Nasal Ra* im.- tbow *l - live *lure. floothipe. cleansing. haallng. A. P. 767. t o 118 Konthe unable to Lie Down in ed -A Toronto Junction CitisorYe Awful Nxperienoe With j Heart Disease. L J. Law, Toronto Junction, Ont•: "I oon. Nda it my duty to give to the public my oz. pori nee with: .AgneWs Cure for the Heart. I ha 0 been soroly troubled with heart diaeaao I and nab;o to lie down in bed for eighteen mon hs owing to smothering spells and palpi- tate n. Each night 1 would have to be propped up t y pillow@ in order to keep from a potheringg Af r treating with several medical men with- out benefit, f procured a bottle of the Heart Cure. After taking the first doio I retired and slept soundly until morning. I used one bot - I tle and have not taken any of the remedy for I Keveln week@, but the heart trouble has nob re-4peared. I consider it the grandest remedy to existence for heart disease." CaMpers are already out about the eastern lakeA of Ontario. Alma Ladies' College. ' Th Fine Art department at Alma Ladipe' College, St. Thomas, Ont., is doing very successful work. ever 1,000 certificate -i from' the Ontario School of Art having been oaken by -the students. Students can ualify at Alma College and receive lioen a to teach in the public and high echo is the various subjects of the art Douce . Rates low. For Announcement addr as Principal Austin, B. D. Wo detook will soon vote on a by-law for a $9, inarket shed. .,; - 1 I� - - " I AN A CURED MAN.", Kidn F Disease Vanquished • by aoutb erloan Kidney Ours -The Rem. dy Which Reliever in sire , Houm ' ilea Soper, Bark's Falls. Ont.: " I anfl'ered much sin for months from kiduey and blad. der di ase. I recoived skilled medical Sreat- meat nd tried all kinds of medicines to no ourpos : in tact I did not obtain any relief untlil 8 uth American Kidney Cure was uied. It see ed to fit my case exactly, g�iving rho ttnmed ate, rolief, f have now ueotl six tgOt- liles an can say positively that I am a, cured 1111111, believe nae bottle of tho renjedy will WUV1n anyone of its ureal worck, ' ., 5 4 : Fi I : -1I - u F r. - - 4 ♦ , ��}' F �'�f fi ",1 a -F r I yp } . i : +.w'1.' s •< ,arc r£.r :d sr r s, ,I.4' . ,fig, i i= ,� t r s 2 ip- f jj ��1 �l 1 w f,. . Y•-- 1 s i a' - ' :: i-+ it M T �z v a i' P* r An Agreeable L aAdve and NLRvx TONI0. IW4 by Dru�tsi U ar eon/ by Hail. 960., 40oi. • gad •1.00 per package. Umplea free. HA �� The Favorite PO11E! forth* Teeth and saw. to • , , a �� and rapidly growing children derive more benefit . from Scott's Emulsion, than all the rest of the food they eat. Its nourishing. powers are .felt almost immedi- ately. Babies and children thrive on Scott's Emulsion when no other form of food iss assimilated, - Scott's P. .Emulsion - Itimulates the appetite, enricher the blood., ovcrcomes recasting and gives strengt,.h to all who take it For Coughs, Coids, Sore Throat, Brgm chitin, Weak Lunrs,- Emaciation, Con• tumptlon, Blood Diseases and ail Forms Of Wasting. Snsd for p.,rtllel. Free. titre A SUtues. Setl*011a. All 0noolsta. ape. A Rt Rob e. . 2 *Sn Y m R' Aa+ q R -r 's a r H r ', k - 3.. '.. iLVL �°' ? 4� A 7� t 'ti � h -A >• spa n r _ Y•+ H a� i �C . €. 3 �. { . :}: ,. �__ - `I. X44 '� { ., �,� WALTER BAKER&coo ,Y Bei The LarYrt 1[aaastetaten of i PURE, RICH GliADS: COCOAS and CHOCOLATE# [ a N<J k Qs. this Coattneat, hav scatted . HIGHEST AWARDS Z, a, !lrom the great :,.els- a e I Industrial and Food _': rJ�- � "' EXPOSITIONS :6 IN EUROPE AND AMEflIOA.: Q . i Caution : In view of tis s': many Imitations , b of the labels and wrappers on ons - i •' g�coda, consumers should make ears � ' that our place of mangf"tum f namely, Dorchester, l![aaa., . is printed on each package. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. i ,, .• WALTER BAKER & CO.. DORCHESTER, fifA88.. 1, g STAMMERINQ y A ` r, Yowl System• No advance teesrite� etlrsn12Z THE ONTARIO INSTITUT111, fi d0 8bsttor 10% 1bs� - , ' 'L%n 150 00 poll tae tun t«�ohw tRaw L . used between 1861 and � a : - 8 UP YOIIR OLD LIOTTZIM andZ , collection@ of stamps and get the hest otlah pops for them from Q A. .Dish, , @M gain 81. Z-, Hamilton- Oso � r - w s� , , _ a'. MBRf here to a snap for ran. Hatrrls has sample cloth pieces fur gWts. dead �'° • for trityl lot, good value.°� S7. Ski. 31 William lit., Terente. `i AGENTS WANTZD for the FarmeW u, ` �4 : I+`riend and Account Book, highly re- commended by the several Ministers of Ag - t- __ rlculture for Cwgada. Prices low. Terme ` liberal, Send for circulars. WILLIAM Bisloes, 1.1 Toronto. Gai- : ANTED H$LP.-Reliable men in every tt�j" locality (local. or travelling► to intro- Luce a new discovery and keep oar show cards lacked upon trees, fences and bridges through - Wt town and country. Steady employmeDL " a' �t ommission or salary 885 per month and "ex- enses and money deposited in any bank when .v� . tartsci. Forparticulara write Tho World Med. �leotrio Co., P.O. Boz 221, London. Ont., Cas. '. . . ,, ,. G. DUTHIE &`SONS `. .:. Slate, alleet-Metal, Tile A Gravel Asensio -.: � :, Shoot Metal Ceilings. Terra Cotta Tile, 1� _ - 131ack and Green Roofing Slate, IKetal Cer-' plow, Felt, Tar, Rooflnq itch, Eke tiatheA Downpipea, etc., supplied the trade. Telephone 1113L Adelaide A Wild KOr Illi - TOI3.0 s - .1 FOR TWENTY-FIVE YEARS .fl i . N ;. . r,: It Y - - THECOOK'S BEST FRIEND LARQ98T SAL[ IM CANADA. •- ;, • , JUST OUT U -' FRREST, IAKE ASD PAlRf FI r Y _ ,a. . Twenty Years of Frontier ifife in Wrsl ern Canada --16!2.1862 . By IlllEV. JORN McDOUGA1.4 _ yw 11r . with 27 full-page original illustroUcina by J. - E. Laughlin. . CLOTH, 81.00. ; The writer of this captivating book has spent - . his whole life ou the Curiadian frontier• and I almoPt wholly ameogtbe Indiana. Hie pert ces to the Government dduring the u icing of IS" • .- �r'r' are y*t treah in Me public riuind. lila pages r teem exciting adventure, and present a e CitraI� r I -with �rwphic portraiture of the ooeditloa of things - rn our Northwest during the fifties and .is- • - ttea- The illustration are wuperby done, est$ 9 the original design int ink and gold on- the . , r Its no because -;. cover rnake it'a very band6,en,e book. Ask your Bookseller for it, er writ* direes ft -. -`•' I'm Scotch but ° •� �1tLIA1•i BRIG6& PublicLer, - O U C a A n d ° 88 sib Bichasoad 18t. wean, ToeesM — smoke a better �,, Cigar than . t ._ tl�oo AOY,�1 �� :. .-: 1181 cost 5c. , . gut I get sax CANADA'S GREATEST ' ' ; MUSIC HOUSE - t . �f them fora . . . . ivarter. Music Publishers, Manufacturer= and Importers . tMl'iRg.TOeACCO CO.. YONTIt[at. Of EVERYTHINt3 MUBtOAL ,'. OP19CIALTIRS : J . - Our `Imperial' Band Instra. a- ' manta, Guilts ", Manololira. A a It ase Banjo*, Harmonlcas, an the Latest Mueio Publi- ` ,,attons. gar Don't purchase until A you nee our prices, Send jot Catalogues - ONLY ASKYOUR SEWING MACHINE AGENT quired. tag goods rr r . s FOR IT, OR SEND A 3�ENT STAMP 1OFOR PARTICULARS. PRICE LIST] w WANT TNI ONrew or MRV MUM TEAONeR AND aANOMASTRM IN CANADA, r c SAMPLES, COTTON YARN.&c. • • • • • WNALEY,ROYCE& CO. - - 0 • " • e 16r1 YONGS aTRF,ET, f TORONTO. - CANADA ..� k �� _ U . ' .. :. B • - 4:•451_...., . ":..1 s : : Beggar " owe tb.a aver.. Everybody wash lit a - : . - �r . 19v*ry Ruder" s w slues, Tim *am life► Ire& ' . ' __ __ UPRIGHT and HORIZONTALe z _° Stationary, Portable & Seml a Portable M , � , All sizos llwru 8 to Ee ggorse PovvtW :_ � 1 •ice .., .� '' q a; -i • . - .. .tt.•W. ISO.' 31l i . • • .. ( .` r.:. :, �'I '• • r l• 'EXIVELLED in Simplicity, Effective °{' , ' d rI '- �4 � t ' Working Quaiitfes aad Durability. , GUARANTEED TQ GIVE FULL POWER CLAIMED _° It . AND Tb DH AS RKPRFUNTED Over 2,000 in successful operation, -. "�' F , ' ', 4 . It will pay you to write us before buying. Pamphlet free. ` • _ .' "�' 'q AtsireupplyMsecond•han ndro-19u11t I , ' ;�J is ' etsa" at moderate `YYATKiwIIO J. �RANTFt?RD. CANAClA ` r .__ - , z a k f iia Y' •pig' s e. q , , y�'. 3A r a= s" ".. d.•. e� Ski ti. ry � .S i a rv�a 5 - c.. 1.F. 'S . f . - . - I. 00 9 ?a i n!+.Y R -:1 �`v • k 7. t r . : t ' �t T S f- w u= ::, .ice '�- � -� - 7 I � #- ..std' 1. :A - � M J%'�' 'Nil :zi Y i`2 - z F r - {+� - 8.. :ra - ��s: rig;_ `� i kr �.y ' t t r! 4f �T , ,y r 'e 4 f �a r w wawt - d ,....� w•-`'�,a -w y1 ,X,, Y:e d� .a. I� . ii .. ' I �� { s i' . 'Y K 9 1 }}r�S �' t A ,. 1 , t tt. _ - V Y --� , i j ', I - � �. .p I ! 3 , 4 1 A I., . . ­� . , .: . .. - . i f , �' .1 I I j ti ' i m ` . ►N., + re �\ R \\ p x tc :� . 1T : b, . ti IA ... ` the -wit trillo i 0 01 '.. published every F iday morning fit its offlae ti Pic ring, Ont. -01.16 per yks>r; • .00 upaid !xt ad'vaa . t] RATES OF ADVERTISING: - First insertion, per 1•ne - - - ' 20 Ic nts. I Each eabsequant in rtion, per line - 6 r This rate does not i elude Legal or Foreign ad= . �ertisements. attics Waken con- speoisl terms giv n top mote for 3 or 6 mo he or by the year. IHal f - yearly or yearly cont acts payable quarterly. Business Cards, to lines or under, with paper, l' One yekr,.45 00, pays lain advance. I i3'Not. $ in local lumns ten cents per line, five cents per line soh subsequent insertion. special contract rat made known on applies- tion. No free adver icing. Advertisements w'thout writtep ustructions - - - - will be inserted until forbidden and charged so- ' nordingly. Orders for discontinuing sdverAlse- t rnente must be in iting and sent to the pub- b • liAher. aV . Job Work prompt] attended t9- . ,.. - v W. J. CLARK • . ' PROPRIETOR. i z-. d FRIDAY, UNE 21, 1895. a . r - . NOTES AND COMMENT$ t _ _ The questionof brandi>g cheese was before the Agricultural committee t Olt Ottawa a ain the other day. i r Strong Ovide ce in favor . of such a x regulation s given. This step is < thought necess y, as our cheese trade i with Graaf Bri ian during the past few months has not been as good as formerly, and i due it is thought to the poor quality being turned out by our various fact ries. - Were the dif- ' i ferent • factorie compelled to label their out put, i would have a teid- ancy to improv the quality. If the butter factorie were treated - ]along the same line i would be a boon to dairying in tile Dominion in no mistake.1. ( ` .1 F . °'I.Willisln D. Welter and John ,. H. Hendershot w re hanged Tuesday) at St. Thomas, 0 t., for the murder)I of William Hen ershott on Decenn1ber 14th, 1894, in he woods of Mid e- ' `fnarch, South old township. he .�, . - crime was com itted to secure sey ral thousand dolls s of insurance w ich . . John Hendershot, uncle of the vie im, .-- _ }lad placed on the life of his nep ow.. i� Both the co demned men mad rs - confession to a Rev. Mr. Spencer, ' `!y' but he refused to give any partic ars Z. . : = , of the confess on. Why these en made a confes ion and then wi h it to remain a ss ret is. rather strap a to , _ .. - understand, u leas it was to sa isfy � the public tha they were guilt►, yet •,Ll. did not desire to reveal the, clrc,am- r `.,- stances tonne ted with the crime. Such a course might be better for ' : relatives. X70.•.' . If: - , :, . A number o superannuatlons in the Post office de artment at Ottawa is . announced, will go into effect on t= July 1st. W at a great big farce and ` _ imposition th s superannuatioil is on r the poor taxpayers of our fair Canada. ' ` !; • -. ook at the Auditor General's report lid it will be seen that these same people have been receiving from $1,- 800 to $5,00 a year as salary, but of course on such small sums could not be supposed put by much ;for old age, neither would they try knowing . that an ann 1 sum would be await• ing them Ivh n they were unable t� - . - work. Thos employed by any Gov' ernment sho d receive a fare salar3 : when in aC nal service, so as tt f keep up the dignity of the office z '1 but when o d age and consequent 1.11 infirni;ties- .c me, they should bo self- sustaininj . The ratepayers an compelled tc look out for the futun 11 I «'; and we are of the opinion that ��{� these clerks, essengers and the like f are not. a whit better than the male 1. 1' who follows the plow, or hoes tur t. _ .. nips, and in act in many cases the ' ' latter is the uperior, in every single respect. Let these employees ereab ' - a sinking find if they choose, � u ;: leo superann ation. By a vote o twenty -line to seven teen the Yor County Council has de . -tided to abo ish toll -gates and hani the York co my roads over to th, �` �� ' • municipalities at the., end of thi t - yngnth. To a sure there are condi tions governi g this transfer. Th I: market fees will have to be with drawn by t e city counbil,l and tL _. various town hips will have to afire r '.. 1 1 . to the transfe in a formal way. A] ' . tliongh the r mouse of the tollgate has been de ired by :the travellin - public for so a years, it Is generale I11 admitted thatthe gingoton : road, i 1.1. _ _ least, will. n t be kept in as good ri 1 pair when theTownships of Scarbor - !. _ and Pickerin assume them. Whe � 1. the. York Company propose � - to abandon t e eset end of the H1n! o ` - ston road to ickering a few mond fl-.I ako, our co cil did .not take kind] to the prop and gave notice thi the same w uld be o posed. - Bi ' p since the cit council has expreesE its willingne to remove the mark, v_ - fees our Co oil will look at the ma " l ` . ter in a so ewhat different ligb "� ` . The rind ob'eotion to Picke>rit ' "I assnmin the road was -he fact tis, ,t - he g b ' e over he gouge, e large' . B g �, I I. -4r -.r!' 2 _ a. M r I 4 I y,y sough no.T 1n good repou ,rya,. 0 small p for sale fit ; elevator, Frena - - .. 1., , `r man ears longer, and mane' Bay. Apply to THOt�. FOODY, sgont for many main so. fo , , -. :. W.D. Matthews & Ce. , .. bridge an 1m- .---�-- � z replace that g - - - - _ ansa outlay. If that said bridge oan Igg CHAItLOTR C#REENW04D�-- .. this ObjeO- Will give lessons in charcoal, Cr yon, • i made county property, and penoil draping, Water colors an 03`Ifi _. .. � I. . - 1. I . _. - ­ I Nature, Objects. Far - _ oa will be greatly reduced. In our Paintinv, from Cogiee, N 1 l terms and sate spp y to MRs. 0. W.. DUCKi�x, .. • i • • • 11 • i pinion the Province should help to Pickering. ... '--. as neither - cep this bridge in repair, - i or . 0• Es. EXCURSION$ Y�; I .. I � � � le Township of Picketed bear all - ,: ( .' aunty of Ontario shoo - pool • Darlington Sbrla of England will run a Fsr- . I e expense, as even- thele of - _ . the Kingston more excursion to the Model Farm, Guelph, on . i m count se g ; urhs y Tuesday, June 36. - �ad considerably. Tuesday June 26th, exoureton day, s epeciN1.* " I.. I. i ' b `_.�w`� .. __ L tram will leave G. T. R. stations as Blow at the p ' following rates • 01'DeA,:�­V g LETTER TO THE EDITO ­ I ADULT. OHILD'N, special train, . Whitby a1 to .66 8.15 a.m. : _ .' y I :.:. Chis department is open to all forte tkir des- Pickering 146 9.01 " I . , - cussion of public questions. The ter must Pt. Union 1 - _ .- - 1 ' . - . in all cases send his correct name with copi T clefs wt the s Trains arrive at nmelpates viii bemtood Ruing O Q o 0 'O 0 o O o , ' - •1 We wish it distinctly understood, l� -. ! that in no case do we hold ourselves re- on all afternoon trains on Monday, lane 24th ; ; ; sponsible for Opinions expressed by comes- d�lnintralgnon all t sic s on till Wada adwJ. June 25tlf. andus» 25th. . r pnndents.-En Nawe.l Free Lunch at the Qollegs. �->• ' DEAR SIR --I was very m11a11 chocked at _- ___--`_ __--. ; - _ _ he shameless `way in which school foot -b'' 1. . L .. _._, l all teams entered the competition for the10 . - .. '' . Dun ` sofa crease prizes at the late Union School ionic at Rosebank. I venture to say • i • • . I . -. . . here was not one team that did not in- - . . - . . -- . alae in some form of cheating. The most oticeable form was that of getting a play- ' . ' . . r or two from another school when the ' ales lainly stated that all players were COOL- . Straw Hate, MerinO ndBrClOtliill9 Hyglan D be bona -fide pupils of the school in i - • . - rhose team they were found playing. . Tow where oan we lace the blame ? ger- Vests, Outing Shirts, Suit mer Coreete� TaffetBr P . ainly not on the shoulders of the com- .. . . nittee, but it must be on the kind of teach- . 1 . . og that will permit boys'to thus act 60 1 . Gloves, Dongola Shoes.:. -- 94shonestly. If teachers would only find - Put whether their pupils intended playing ' . n an of the matches -end urge upon them Are India enable ' - he duty of sating honestly in this as in . I r . everything else the trouble would soon be . , ' - . 11 :topped. It 'has been done in for mer .. - . - . _ - . fears, but I think it was more noticeable •_• This -weather. . ihrs year than ever, so now would be the I + • . I • • f ;ime to call a halt. Surely ii the teaching - , ; . - . liven in oar public schools mean• soy- - 1. ' thing, it means the inculcating of right a�� . - , .. I _. I principles in the minds of the rising -The i .. . . � ­ - - ' generation. Of the practices persued by _ i - . J• r senior foot=ball teams, I have nothing w :' _ 1 _ ___ ea except that it may have been from ]Rotary ►�hlxatl+e . , y P •••. them, that the juniors have learned their lessons so well. If a prize is worth win- -�, - ' ' . . ning, it is worth winning honestly. LEADS THEM ALL - - - :.- Ax Orr•LoogER. . - � ..�. . 1.+ 1. 1. .. 1. ; . . I I __ :�'. . .1 IWm-,--Henry.... . . Prisoners escaped from the jail at .. ,tw ,� . Woodstock and Na anee' ' `� .., William Fawcett of rampton blew % . • . ' t .. - - his brains out with a 6110 91111. Barry's New Stare, . . The (}rand Lodge Ca adian Order of ""' Oddfellows is meeting at Lindday. i„ ... . _ - - . 1_ _ . Mr. George McNabb, barrister, of -. - - . . . . London, was thrown from his burse and - t ._ killed. l arem , Nornt..-' : .1 - - . ...C1 . __ ___ -1 . . ..., 1. .- , New ddvert ements. _ '. . . .: . .; _ ' . ,., _ . FOR BALE -(food canvas tent 14:18 . 1 , . . . . _ six ft. wall, price 010. For partiou lars ad- dress, Boz 27, Brougham. 86 - . . k - _. J THOMAS PARKER, Barrister etc. M - - - at Danbarton each Saturday. Private p ' . .­_]� Enna. toloar� at AT* per oan . y There ain't vac 11ie in talking in he Y " - � .. . ' 10�s � . � - .. � ! 11 - ... Il po11 want •good maohins, . . _ 800 Bu$HE e3 of seed Oats and You ought to bay the $tandara : a large Qu 1111 o berry bushes, both It's the best you ever aeon. n� � - res and black. J. E, (SEE. Pickering. y - �. .. .- FOR BALE -A nam r of pias, about ' The viberatin fellers � N�@ver before has our Stook been as large . . s weekr old. For terms and other pardon- All look on It and grin, and Prlcea. as : cheap. ears a 1 at 1ot89,con. 8, Pickering, or ads:... A salon them tb�t buys it -- . W. MITCHELL, Brook Road P. 10. , - _ Will be sadly taken in. ' PI(3EON8 FOR BALE -Homers. and ' Dr cons -A5 pais. for sale,.ohe.p. 184{ An' X011 will see in this 'ere instance - .1. A nother ' large • consignment of Goods to Dragoons --45 birds, *2.o0 per pair ; lb6b birds, 41.00 per pair. That their sayin' is not tree, hated this week, . . Auatwarppss and TTumbler� at half price A plyin a - . to W. J. GORDON, Pickering. Out. 3a� For the sBtae bard d to il4hraa h. . -_. - . And e 6 -. •' I .. ' Notice to Creditors. ®o taint no use in talkin', . . If you want the beet machine, r DRESS GOODS AND PRINTS -New Prints 'in great variety of DURSUANT to the Revised -Stitatee You'll have to bay the Standard - patterns, New Dress Goods and Trimmings to match. "The very Cream . 1 . of Ontario, 1887, chapter 110 notice is And we are sayin' what we WORD. o f the fashion." . ' . hexeb given that all tree ton and other ppcet- : Boas �arinQ claims against the estate of Jwe. Sullivan, late of the Township of Pickering, in - So this is the way with agenta of old . GENT'S ' FURNISHINGS --Hate and Caps`in the newest designs of ' the County of Ontario, Yeoman, deoeseed, wbo style machines. They still try to mike died on or about the fourth day of April, A. D., believe their old vibrators are the. the Beason. • 18®5, are . r aired b send by ragtstared letter,people. . . . , . pprepp�aid, to Thomas Parker, room 44, Janes t, but when ilia Standard �4aty bulldina..oronto, solicitor for (icorgs smith Shuttle is shown to the pts :t knocks READY MADE CLO' HING--As we are going out of this branch of and Thomas Nowlan, of the Township of Pick ' ertng, exeon:on of the last will and testament the bottom out of all taco statements our business, and going more extensively into Boots and Shoes, we will clear `` of the said James Sullivan, dsceaasd. on or be. and establishes the fact that the $ttnd- fore the Mh day of July, A. D.. 18x1; their and is the best oo earth. out the balance of our youth's, boy's, and men's Ready -Made Clothing, re- names and addresses With full particulars of girdleee of cost- or profit. We have a splendid line of Men's Pants at Goo. - their claims and of the securities (it any) held H TjOtty .by them.Worth =t,9e. .And notice is furthbr given that after the said -- s•, . . Uel mentioned date the said executors will pro- BARGAINS YN EVERY DEPbTiTbdENT-••Don't let go that mighty i teed b distribute the assets of the said deoeae- �.th� . t. ! ea amonngg the persons entitled thereto having - dollar until you have tested who sella. the cheapest.. We don't fear com- - regard only b the claims of which notlar shall , have been given as above required, and the p8tlti0n. • I said executors will not be liable for the eatd STANDARD m BA31 I Now GOO& coming and going every week. 06me to the Cheap sash - _ assets or an part thereof b any person or persods of whose claim or claims notion shall store, North Claremont, for Bargains. - not bave been received b them or their OF C,&N 1 PA1 . , . - � solicitor at the time afor"03. - . (- Dated this ;8th dal of Juno, IM. - _ . _ . TROMAs . PARKER. ' . Room 44, Janes Building, Toronto, Capita, paid uo . $1,�,� rI : ____________________________ � 35-35 solicitor for said Executors. . .. Reserved Fund $ 6W.OQ . . .. ' ""'_ Assets Over $7,700, t - , j .- Head Office, TORONTO. . }A. . - ; . s This sank has a branch at Btonf . : . �'xrea+t "' - "' : . I ­­. .: --I: . �..' ­'�.. . _ I`�'O� where deposits are taken at oarreni - Same of $1 and upwards reosived i 3 R. ..0 -_ IS i . L. - I . :. .­. the SAVINGS BANK Department, , `a interest allowed half- yearly, ars pellin i i �` ' Farmers sale notes and othei i . s paper discounted at lgwest sties. Fclr _ further information apply to ` ` .. . . ` PP yI. . B JOHN ELLIOTT, Agent,Ir t` e STfl i7FF1iILLE - I e___ -.1 .. � WAt', __ - '- .. ."-- .. ­­_. INo. Ma I 1- � :_­ ­ ­� .. Q . a ig r �j % .. . '_ . . -1 - I .. . -1-- - - . I. - _: ­_ . _.. . I.. I � � . � �_. - I- 9 8� QPI . -_ - -, .. - , - - , . , . . .. � . - ..- ___ ­ __ - - . . .. . . I ` �',, The Ch®ass Gods bean is Back toutb•+ - N y Parasxeen ort '1. I I ,., nI . .. - ....N IA - Pt ; $: %,- 4wK 13 g 4 And will have a Re -Opening Sale on Saturday Neat, June 15th, 1895, -at the - . I- �ry ��W� Get aw $'110 , � Q ° �K Old Stand, where he will be glad to receive all old friends and ��{ n For distributing IInseeti�edes and C s ae 21 � - Customers, and will treat them to Bigger targaine G � r � ow '+� r in f d Fungioldes. ; ! Io a % = b -4 than eve _ ; Than8 D i ba ui;e` .e 0 1w ' a a 's • distributes ,Green, Iondon Purple. a R «,n Jas ® - Dry. �iti o8d80 ilOthlYl , . _ _ . . 13 L , .y ellebore, Sulphur, Lime, un 'roid r - Q "r - p -1 Feb - . Boots 8e. Shoes, Crockery, Etc., Etc. ►t Tobacco Dust, etc, H 1.- 3 ; it Destroys potato ibtlp aiud`all other . td V«« sem' tlu �atarui, 0 every customer, vie will give g6 lbd. of gShulated, 0r I f Insects and prevents blight, w K ,� 0. «p llti►y A -lt�e nim brown euge�cr forl.00. We have soma special Value in For the farm, :orchard, vineyard Tem, to "' �' J �'° Van ' Buhr . and E at Cash prices. Remember the Old i t- and den. 0 ttr M - a� July ., ' ' . t. For artioul 'sand to . r , 'd oa rme , dal ilctio •rer0orns. ,, _ P - ;�.. N a ,vow a't sy '1. t I a x %, . °a H PK OT. Nt - - 'ti r - „�-d't, -c r ./'•' Y "•,t >�u,rmK'`t�,'.i ;3= +!1- yy� is -,- -.Y - r - �' .pp,. , 'rr +�ir+i 'a R H! .. ,. A y_ ir- p: k - .'Y •,. w:333 t T' :� �kHa r Cansdat. Green t r afde �1- Aft. for � � � , � , ,�� �- f��:t�.. �-� � � ��.�, �. � � _ _ ,. �. , r £g s. i4 - , :w. } 3 . lti.2"1 !P" A - t -:F' •'"! k.� 1.. Y.r u. ..'V., �b ,yx-. :,a ktt �v :3{Galip�sr .r k G N s ��R�.. _ - . ,24 - ;•izkf -._ _.- _:rte" - :�'. a.. 1 6 .a ' vt' t{ s. fi tt w ! n e� � t yrs �rN -. , .-.4"ti v r� ' •,' iVVVVVV i - y,- a ,f � Qx g :; n 'rt, ,y �s: And awe s .., @ z ', Vii. ••s Sid' -,e� ,g,"A #'.c`.t-'.ti M..lz''•5 Hi_ _ zCil v.a�, ` ^- ; ,r =r _I M�04 .. -r. I I- . -. , ..k - I y�-`i. % ' `dal e /j''•a _. . .4 pp Y 1 t 'tJ x. al .X- W, -'Yt t 3 1 .' # iiif-+ - it t=-.�'i 71.. 3.113.. { -Tx • I'd '� ?�"� • e - 9+ .:::-: 4 j ,a -I �F_ ,. F t a#a r 'l F�_ - -I " .YNw t 1 v Y - ., , a . .. _ i� .. :.,,_r .: _ - .. i . 11 � _. .. _. - :., a . . ,. : - M P Ag-.-We�sv���t�SL���'� f b `^A - .. I sough no.T 1n good repou ,rya,. 0 small p for sale fit ; elevator, Frena - - .. 1., , `r man ears longer, and mane' Bay. Apply to THOt�. FOODY, sgont for many main so. fo , , -. :. W.D. Matthews & Ce. , .. bridge an 1m- .---�-- � z replace that g - - - - _ ansa outlay. If that said bridge oan Igg CHAItLOTR C#REENW04D�-- .. this ObjeO- Will give lessons in charcoal, Cr yon, • i made county property, and penoil draping, Water colors an 03`Ifi _. .. � I. . - 1. I . _. - ­ I Nature, Objects. Far - _ oa will be greatly reduced. In our Paintinv, from Cogiee, N 1 l terms and sate spp y to MRs. 0. W.. DUCKi�x, .. • i • • • 11 • i pinion the Province should help to Pickering. ... '--. as neither - cep this bridge in repair, - i or . 0• Es. EXCURSION$ Y�; I .. I � � � le Township of Picketed bear all - ,: ( .' aunty of Ontario shoo - pool • Darlington Sbrla of England will run a Fsr- . I e expense, as even- thele of - _ . the Kingston more excursion to the Model Farm, Guelph, on . i m count se g ; urhs y Tuesday, June 36. - �ad considerably. Tuesday June 26th, exoureton day, s epeciN1.* " I.. I. i ' b `_.�w`� .. __ L tram will leave G. T. R. stations as Blow at the p ' following rates • 01'DeA,:�­V g LETTER TO THE EDITO ­ I ADULT. OHILD'N, special train, . Whitby a1 to .66 8.15 a.m. : _ .' y I :.:. Chis department is open to all forte tkir des- Pickering 146 9.01 " I . , - cussion of public questions. The ter must Pt. Union 1 - _ .- - 1 ' . - . in all cases send his correct name with copi T clefs wt the s Trains arrive at nmelpates viii bemtood Ruing O Q o 0 'O 0 o O o , ' - •1 We wish it distinctly understood, l� -. ! that in no case do we hold ourselves re- on all afternoon trains on Monday, lane 24th ; ; ; sponsible for Opinions expressed by comes- d�lnintralgnon all t sic s on till Wada adwJ. June 25tlf. andus» 25th. . r pnndents.-En Nawe.l Free Lunch at the Qollegs. �->• ' DEAR SIR --I was very m11a11 chocked at _- ___--`_ __--. ; - _ _ he shameless `way in which school foot -b'' 1. . L .. _._, l all teams entered the competition for the10 . - .. '' . Dun ` sofa crease prizes at the late Union School ionic at Rosebank. I venture to say • i • • . I . -. . . here was not one team that did not in- - . . - . . -- . alae in some form of cheating. The most oticeable form was that of getting a play- ' . ' . . r or two from another school when the ' ales lainly stated that all players were COOL- . Straw Hate, MerinO ndBrClOtliill9 Hyglan D be bona -fide pupils of the school in i - • . - rhose team they were found playing. . Tow where oan we lace the blame ? ger- Vests, Outing Shirts, Suit mer Coreete� TaffetBr P . ainly not on the shoulders of the com- .. . . nittee, but it must be on the kind of teach- . 1 . . og that will permit boys'to thus act 60 1 . Gloves, Dongola Shoes.:. -- 94shonestly. If teachers would only find - Put whether their pupils intended playing ' . n an of the matches -end urge upon them Are India enable ' - he duty of sating honestly in this as in . I r . everything else the trouble would soon be . , ' - . 11 :topped. It 'has been done in for mer .. - . - . _ - . fears, but I think it was more noticeable •_• This -weather. . ihrs year than ever, so now would be the I + • . I • • f ;ime to call a halt. Surely ii the teaching - , ; . - . liven in oar public schools mean• soy- - 1. ' thing, it means the inculcating of right a�� . - , .. I _. I principles in the minds of the rising -The i .. . . � ­ - - ' generation. Of the practices persued by _ i - . J• r senior foot=ball teams, I have nothing w :' _ 1 _ ___ ea except that it may have been from ]Rotary ►�hlxatl+e . , y P •••. them, that the juniors have learned their lessons so well. If a prize is worth win- -�, - ' ' . . ning, it is worth winning honestly. LEADS THEM ALL - - - :.- Ax Orr•LoogER. . - � ..�. . 1.+ 1. 1. .. 1. ; . . I I __ :�'. . .1 IWm-,--Henry.... . . Prisoners escaped from the jail at .. ,tw ,� . Woodstock and Na anee' ' `� .., William Fawcett of rampton blew % . • . ' t .. - - his brains out with a 6110 91111. Barry's New Stare, . . The (}rand Lodge Ca adian Order of ""' Oddfellows is meeting at Lindday. i„ ... . _ - - . 1_ _ . Mr. George McNabb, barrister, of -. - - . . . . London, was thrown from his burse and - t ._ killed. l arem , Nornt..-' : .1 - - . ...C1 . __ ___ -1 . . ..., 1. .- , New ddvert ements. _ '. . . .: . .; _ ' . ,., _ . FOR BALE -(food canvas tent 14:18 . 1 , . . . . _ six ft. wall, price 010. For partiou lars ad- dress, Boz 27, Brougham. 86 - . . k - _. J THOMAS PARKER, Barrister etc. M - - - at Danbarton each Saturday. Private p ' . .­_]� Enna. toloar� at AT* per oan . y There ain't vac 11ie in talking in he Y " - � .. . ' 10�s � . � - .. � ! 11 - ... Il po11 want •good maohins, . . _ 800 Bu$HE e3 of seed Oats and You ought to bay the $tandara : a large Qu 1111 o berry bushes, both It's the best you ever aeon. n� � - res and black. J. E, (SEE. Pickering. y - �. .. .- FOR BALE -A nam r of pias, about ' The viberatin fellers � N�@ver before has our Stook been as large . . s weekr old. For terms and other pardon- All look on It and grin, and Prlcea. as : cheap. ears a 1 at 1ot89,con. 8, Pickering, or ads:... A salon them tb�t buys it -- . W. MITCHELL, Brook Road P. 10. , - _ Will be sadly taken in. ' PI(3EON8 FOR BALE -Homers. and ' Dr cons -A5 pais. for sale,.ohe.p. 184{ An' X011 will see in this 'ere instance - .1. A nother ' large • consignment of Goods to Dragoons --45 birds, *2.o0 per pair ; lb6b birds, 41.00 per pair. That their sayin' is not tree, hated this week, . . Auatwarppss and TTumbler� at half price A plyin a - . to W. J. GORDON, Pickering. Out. 3a� For the sBtae bard d to il4hraa h. . -_. - . And e 6 -. •' I .. ' Notice to Creditors. ®o taint no use in talkin', . . If you want the beet machine, r DRESS GOODS AND PRINTS -New Prints 'in great variety of DURSUANT to the Revised -Stitatee You'll have to bay the Standard - patterns, New Dress Goods and Trimmings to match. "The very Cream . 1 . of Ontario, 1887, chapter 110 notice is And we are sayin' what we WORD. o f the fashion." . ' . hexeb given that all tree ton and other ppcet- : Boas �arinQ claims against the estate of Jwe. Sullivan, late of the Township of Pickering, in - So this is the way with agenta of old . GENT'S ' FURNISHINGS --Hate and Caps`in the newest designs of ' the County of Ontario, Yeoman, deoeseed, wbo style machines. They still try to mike died on or about the fourth day of April, A. D., believe their old vibrators are the. the Beason. • 18®5, are . r aired b send by ragtstared letter,people. . . . , . pprepp�aid, to Thomas Parker, room 44, Janes t, but when ilia Standard �4aty bulldina..oronto, solicitor for (icorgs smith Shuttle is shown to the pts :t knocks READY MADE CLO' HING--As we are going out of this branch of and Thomas Nowlan, of the Township of Pick ' ertng, exeon:on of the last will and testament the bottom out of all taco statements our business, and going more extensively into Boots and Shoes, we will clear `` of the said James Sullivan, dsceaasd. on or be. and establishes the fact that the $ttnd- fore the Mh day of July, A. D.. 18x1; their and is the best oo earth. out the balance of our youth's, boy's, and men's Ready -Made Clothing, re- names and addresses With full particulars of girdleee of cost- or profit. We have a splendid line of Men's Pants at Goo. - their claims and of the securities (it any) held H TjOtty .by them.Worth =t,9e. .And notice is furthbr given that after the said -- s•, . . Uel mentioned date the said executors will pro- BARGAINS YN EVERY DEPbTiTbdENT-••Don't let go that mighty i teed b distribute the assets of the said deoeae- �.th� . t. ! ea amonngg the persons entitled thereto having - dollar until you have tested who sella. the cheapest.. We don't fear com- - regard only b the claims of which notlar shall , have been given as above required, and the p8tlti0n. • I said executors will not be liable for the eatd STANDARD m BA31 I Now GOO& coming and going every week. 06me to the Cheap sash - _ assets or an part thereof b any person or persods of whose claim or claims notion shall store, North Claremont, for Bargains. - not bave been received b them or their OF C,&N 1 PA1 . , . - � solicitor at the time afor"03. - . (- Dated this ;8th dal of Juno, IM. - _ . _ . TROMAs . PARKER. ' . Room 44, Janes Building, Toronto, Capita, paid uo . $1,�,� rI : ____________________________ � 35-35 solicitor for said Executors. . .. Reserved Fund $ 6W.OQ . . .. ' ""'_ Assets Over $7,700, t - , j .- Head Office, TORONTO. . }A. . - ; . s This sank has a branch at Btonf . : . �'xrea+t "' - "' : . I ­­. .: --I: . �..' ­'�.. . _ I`�'O� where deposits are taken at oarreni - Same of $1 and upwards reosived i 3 R. ..0 -_ IS i . L. - I . :. .­. the SAVINGS BANK Department, , `a interest allowed half- yearly, ars pellin i i �` ' Farmers sale notes and othei i . s paper discounted at lgwest sties. Fclr _ further information apply to ` ` .. . . ` PP yI. . B JOHN ELLIOTT, Agent,Ir t` e STfl i7FF1iILLE - I e___ -.1 .. � WAt', __ - '- .. ."-- .. ­­_. INo. Ma I 1- � :_­ ­ ­� .. Q . a ig r �j % .. . '_ . . -1 - I .. . -1-- - - . I. - _: ­_ . _.. . I.. I � � . � �_. - I- 9 8� QPI . -_ - -, .. - , - - , . , . . .. � . - ..- ___ ­ __ - - . . .. . . I ` �',, The Ch®ass Gods bean is Back toutb•+ - N y Parasxeen ort '1. I I ,., nI . .. - ....N IA - Pt ; $: %,- 4wK 13 g 4 And will have a Re -Opening Sale on Saturday Neat, June 15th, 1895, -at the - . I- �ry ��W� Get aw $'110 , � Q ° �K Old Stand, where he will be glad to receive all old friends and ��{ n For distributing IInseeti�edes and C s ae 21 � - Customers, and will treat them to Bigger targaine G � r � ow '+� r in f d Fungioldes. ; ! Io a % = b -4 than eve _ ; Than8 D i ba ui;e` .e 0 1w ' a a 's • distributes ,Green, Iondon Purple. a R «,n Jas ® - Dry. �iti o8d80 ilOthlYl , . _ _ . . 13 L , .y ellebore, Sulphur, Lime, un 'roid r - Q "r - p -1 Feb - . Boots 8e. Shoes, Crockery, Etc., Etc. ►t Tobacco Dust, etc, H 1.- 3 ; it Destroys potato ibtlp aiud`all other . td V«« sem' tlu �atarui, 0 every customer, vie will give g6 lbd. of gShulated, 0r I f Insects and prevents blight, w K ,� 0. «p llti►y A -lt�e nim brown euge�cr forl.00. We have soma special Value in For the farm, :orchard, vineyard Tem, to "' �' J �'° Van ' Buhr . and E at Cash prices. Remember the Old i t- and den. 0 ttr M - a� July ., ' ' . t. For artioul 'sand to . r , 'd oa rme , dal ilctio •rer0orns. ,, _ P - ;�.. N a ,vow a't sy '1. t I a x %, . °a H PK OT. Nt - - 'ti r - „�-d't, -c r ./'•' Y "•,t >�u,rmK'`t�,'.i ;3= +!1- yy� is -,- -.Y - r - �' .pp,. , 'rr +�ir+i 'a R H! .. ,. A y_ ir- p: k - .'Y •,. w:333 t T' :� �kHa r Cansdat. Green t r afde �1- Aft. for � � � , � , ,�� �- f��:t�.. �-� � � ��.�, �. � � _ _ ,. �. , r £g s. i4 - , :w. } 3 . lti.2"1 !P" A - t -:F' •'"! k.� 1.. Y.r u. ..'V., �b ,yx-. :,a ktt �v :3{Galip�sr .r k G N s ��R�.. _ - . ,24 - ;•izkf -._ _.- _:rte" - :�'. a.. 1 6 .a ' vt' t{ s. fi tt w ! n e� � t yrs �rN -. , .-.4"ti v r� ' •,' iVVVVVV i - y,- a ,f � Qx g :; n 'rt, ,y �s: And awe s .., @ z ', Vii. ••s Sid' -,e� ,g,"A #'.c`.t-'.ti M..lz''•5 Hi_ _ zCil v.a�, ` . . . --7— --- ­ v O%ffr.a._ . - I ] The . Dewesf thing out in - Lo f don's . .1. .. ' �< . world of .swelldom s a hand painted /�"-"� shirt front, 'friends in the • . Seventy horses and cattle were killed `1—' - near Qu'Appellely a 8 hours' visitation '- of peculiar grey flies. ��� - T, W. Chapple, M. , P. Uxbridge, in. '� tends to sail on the 29 h in3t. by Steamer _ -1 �'`_ - Vancouver for England. *ey have gone ,, . . , . T Aurora way this , he gross receipt of Bowmanvl'lle post 1offioe fo_ year nding Jane 80th, . I .• - . `` . ; S . 1894I I-, waa 84,604 ; salary, rent, etc $1870- •n ML 82. ! - PICKERING, Ont. The "contract for re airs to the Clark - - - posed roadway was le Saturday. E. P. _ . Doncaster's tender be g the lowest he = s • was awarded the job.11 M _ pring -..�At the Bay of Quin a Methodist Con- Goo s . ferenoe last week the XJxbridge district , . ,: ,. I was taken in the Toro to conference efnd ' ' ' 0 • • •: • • • • • • • • • . ; - . Whitby given in its place. ce. , - . A deputation interviewed Sir Macken -I I , i - I . • -1 �: zie Bowell, Mr. Anger and Senator Fer . I�ew Prints, Cotto'nades, Shirti6gst, Corsets. guson to ask for a gra t towards a dairy. Gents Ties, latest Style and Color. White adad Fancy Shut$" - exhibition in eastern ntario. j Spring Suit•ngs and Pantinge. Last Wednesday ight some Martie Remnants f Prints at Reduced' rices. - ! i sawed down Dr. Arch r`a new telephon� Wall Pa r P - `• poles from Blackstock as for as Hughes' . pe from 5c. up..1. .. --rll , . hill. They have been replaced by new G. PAR�ERi Dnnbarton. ones. The village of Keuil Orth, Out., �seve _ ' miles south of MountForest, was �swep . out by fire on Sunday morning. The KILT & DILLINGHAM'S I total loss is estimateJ. t twelve thousans dollars.- '.- _.1 - Chas. Allenzs, the year-old son. 'o I Furniture Establishment is replete with the latest styles in - Wm. A_ llems, Barrie read, was instantly` . --- killed by having his lie d crushed�etwee BEDROOM SU TS at, $12. - a wagon rack and tel phone pole. Th ;I , -.. PARLOR SUITS,' accident happened in front of his father +' . , house.I.EXTENSION TABLES and : - Cvclist John S. Joh stop will not rac ( - Zimmermau at Ash ury Park. Th1. CHAIRS of till descriptions. . match may be decided at Hanlan's Point We h�a an offer of a 85,000 purse haying bee e° a lot of new styles in Picture Framinga on hand. r_ made by the Toronto Ferry Race Asso �+% , oiation. NDE- �.TAKIN -: Our Undertakin De artme t is also' Com Tete in every About 4. e. m:, last Saturday' a fieri g P l p B e y respect. Coffins and Caskets in all sizee co stantly on hand. Embalm- fire broke, out in th premises, on the . . - corner Ontario and Col orne streets, Oeh 1 . ins made a specialty.. T m -- — - -- - • Awa, owned by Mr. A lesworth, and con HILTS c� DIL�IN M Plcke ruined them. The brigade was prompt 3 ly on duty, but unable to cope, with the - difficulty In time to save the property. --- Y---•----------- -- ---- -•-------------- . It was a clear case of f oeudiansm.' Justice Street aa{{prId son sailed from Ir'ew' A bolt of the French Conservative There are thunder clouds hangi11rs!L over York for England,+on the SS. Mobile. members is •threatened at Ottawa over -- the head of DetectiveHarrison., . . Henry Arkell, ostmaster of Aylmer, the Mani obs school question. McWilliams, of Agnes st. Toronto, says Out , died- rathe suddenly on Sunday, „moi . that armed with a -war ant to search the He was formerly merchant and shipper ... , Horse Register.. . room of one of her oarders Harrison at.Port Stanley. r - - - visited her hoagie and ssulted and inrAult- Dig cry Hayn .Bowmanville; re• ,, -- ^"— - ad her. She claims 83,000 damages.. ¢� F'iinPr•tI .star•, (1381), '[?7i1), 'the im• turned home after a week's absence, ported '1 Clydesdale stallion, the property 1 Bowmsnville was add sold 'in the satarday, and found his wife d6ad on the y y of Jon than Porter, Pickering, Ont., matter of s carpet fact ry. The simos�nt lounge. Heart disease. will ms a the season of 1895 as follows: of bonus asked for w 8 subscribed. and And flow pork*, butter ' and cheese are Monde , June 3rd, leaves his own stable, the writings were dra nap to Nandi it sown in the dam s, and wheat has hada Pickeri Ig, proceeds to Woodruff; -s hotel, over, when an effort to borrow 11 00 ;on rise. Don't all ah for wheat. Some Whitby, noon; Ceotial hotel. 6shaws, . the strength of it bein in- sight, led to had better keep a the dairy. night. ' Tuesday noon to .Woodruff's the knowledge of the fact that the pi.rtiee . .-,--"`�-'- betel, hitbv, nigght, Wednesday to most interested were n t worth a cent'. ` HITQY. . I I _ Gordon's hote•1, Pickering ; tbewce to his own stable over Thursday night. Fri -John McNeill and John llel ersou, The farmers i this section are couch day, Ja es Found's, Danbartori, noon ; who were confined in t e gaol at ! Wood- discouraged over t e present appearance of Matwe l's hotel, Highland Creed, night. stock, Ont., previous to their removal to the bay crop. Saturday to his own stable until the fol- . the penetentiary and C niral- prison, the Geo. Barnes is laying lacrosse with the lowing onday morning. - former for three years nd the la ter for Markham team this Beason. He was rath• pogle � anion. Standard. 199,3 A.T.R eiahteen months, for burglary mad, a used tip at Mar ham Friday. o trial 2.17}, race reo. 2.23J, the pr ►party of their escape Monday fteri5oon, and np A large names from here .attended the µ G.Barnes, (}seen River, will make the to. w -late hour next n ht wer still�at union picnic at R Bebank Friday, and all R report having had s Brand time. season f 1895 aB follows :—Monday May . large. 6th les es his , fvn stable Green�Rivei to 1-. The College clo inR on Wednesday even. Gleeson's Vote[, Greenwood, noon ; to The -cows in the Haig borhood df Barrie i g was well attended. The program was-Gordon15ave been dein from oma m sterioae Ga'I:Hotel, Pickering, night. Tura• g even better than n former occasions. day W crnfi's Hotel, Whitby,. noon ; Manse. It has turned o t that they have Cricket is cath r booming in town just Sebert' dote! Broo6lin, night. Vt'ed• been eating binder I i e. One farmer n w. There promises to be a fair team needs H tel, Myrtle, noon ; L.I-Sebert's lost sevela cows out o eight etiiieted. h re before fall, it.the boys attend diligent y' p Hotel, Pot Perry, night.. Thursday, . The- binder twine was left ampng the 1 to practice. - Utica, oo , b . straw - and the -cow ate It, the The telephone r pwrers are now camped • Y Epsom, Mansion House. - .;. II awn by the stsiti n. They have been re I Uxbrid e, fight. Fridasy, John Sanders, result being that the ord acc(lmulted Goodw' , oon; Queen s Hotel. Stouff•" P acing the short poles• with much larger in a ball. The safe plan would be to re o es, aloe the B se Line. villa, night. $atarday own stable until move the twine when th band is _ int at g follow,ng M nosy morning. The Above - , - the -threshing. There promise to be much, camping route will be continued tbrough out the down at the baythis Beason. Already eeaaon hesit Mud weather rmittin Between sundown on Satnrdi� night any are making arrangements -to locate- - - 9. _ .last and daybreak Sunda morning burg- -tents there. Why- cannot the Grand Grit {I�IlkeA the thoro'--bred- -trotting lars effected.an entrano into the post- Trunk run daily a ursions down.' stallion the raperty of W. G. ''Gerow, - ofiio� at Concord, and ca rigid off a gnanD• The 34th Battalion went into camp on Whitev le, O it., will make the season of t e fair round Tuesday. The staff is ;— IW95 as follow :—Monde Bis 16 leaves tity of stuff. • Postmaster + Clarke also g Y' y May,6 Lieut.•Col: N: F. Patterson, Majors Fare own stable W itevale, to F. 0. McQuayst, runs a general store in the same premises, 11 and McGilliv ay, Major and Adjutant lot 6, n. 4, ickering noon, to Harry and the marauders, who Rot in throag�l a IR atledRe, Surgeon Major Rae, Capt Dillon, Meeti'r lot 26, Win. 3 to West i White , - side window, took a los of dry goods, q g Wm. Hepburo"i, lot �, artermaater. sift o[ the Bevan Com night, aesda boots:an&shoes, and oth r merepandise, p&nice .. over st ength. C'The'men-are 6 con 5, ',"t W citby boon, .Wilspn's hotel together with a quantity f stamps and $5 tine lot of young fellows. and the battalion Ash burn, nig t, Wednesday; Frank . in cash, the total value o the etc en pro- is•credited with being far ahead of previous Jones, lot 4, eon 7, Pickeripg noon, perty beii, ; about $200. years. Wilson a hotel, Cl aromontf night ; There- - B an amendment to he Agroaltnral - day o n stab e, night, .Friday, , Wm. . Indy Arte act proposed b Hoi�. John WOO 'B I 0SPSODIN1S. Stoneh uses, 1 t'9, con 4, flaarboro, noon - - P P y Th Great! English AemedY. , John raham' , lot 35, Kingston road, Dr /den and assented to y the �Legisla i; atm ��, �,.a,,,ta to tn. �,. directors of ric ltaral ' ooieties Pickering nig t, t3at•irday, C}ormley'e aR ppW: at►nd peraaaentty hotel, iverpoo market, noon, own stable will be .required hereafte to pir bit all � Gare an corms or Nervous till following onda morning. This I/ealiwesr. Diwtastow..gDef'b - - kinds of gambling and games oft chance w r��oeenovawdoo route will be co tintle throuillout the within 300 yards of the fair grounds dur I season, health nd weather permitting. ing exhibitions. Fsxkire ' ill now be lase Y yods of� bu"a„OQ,.t� troublesome, and the p a and ,thimble crlTbba000, oyt,rlwor 8ttsn>a. Josh Billings, the property of Jonathan ringer -at shows will be me a thin of Before and After. lents, WhkA soon toad to t+w Porter, f 1895 i g, Ont., will make the g g a� and an early Dia s. season of 189;1 a follows: —Mospday, May the past. It is Done ton oon. sr"V. z"anum. - p Has been prescribed p'Ter 8s ye an In thousands, of 6, leaves own et ole, Pickering, ,tor' Wood- One Johe Bttrrowe as erriEy led on feel ie th i}ettabte rtnd sorest ltedtotne riff a hotel, W iter noon, to Central Thursday last at Can ngton -Con moron. Aa dragglsttor wet•. Phoshodieal u hotel, Oshawa,night. Taeedy, Hotel; stable fintcli$e on a c�lar a of arson and beofters +.oethiess medicine to place of chss. Raglin, noon, to Sebert'e hotel, Port suspected to be the plan advertised -for fnaloee pr•i in let , and we will send by return I Perry, night. Wednesday, I Heard's killing his VV in Philade phis} last spring �- Price one , •it six, $5.' owe wilt hotel, Manohes er, noon, Wilson's hotel, ptea�e.Nastoittoura Pamphiegfreeto.as�address. Ashburn, nig t. Tharsday,i 13ebert's .- He. was brought before M gletrate Brown a Wood Carsanat.s, • hotel, Brooklin, noon, Gordon's hotel, of Cannington, and by hi remanded to wtndsor, out, raaada. , I I Pickering, nig t. Friday, lhile. Knox's appear before Magistrate oft.' Ou being . !Sol in Whitb by W. til, Howse. Brock road, noon, Maxwell's hotel, High• brought forward, and afte a careful ex• __ _ _ _-_ -- —__ land Creek, tight. Saturday. John amination of the deeolipti n of the sup- . r,,` r p -CT �-�H Henderson's, t ,t 33, oon, 2, Pickering, posed murderer Magistra a Nott - decilied -�------- . noon, then to is own stable (where he he was not the man char ed and at once •-;9' 11^r� will remain until the following Monday liberated him. morning. Th above route will be con- - - . J. •_ r tinned throughout the season, health and r' ,'`.y`.'f$-Jill Y,i"S'f ,,p �^ g z i - �? i`"t' W14" -gid �y�k•� 'A € �' # 3° '- f i x � m. .. ����,, , �ta W IS , i` . I H E , .,.1.., •' II :NEST - CA-. , N TME WORLD ­.I - I --.. EA -I... FROM THE A PLANT TO THE T[A CUP IN ITS NATIVE PURITY. • 1. I '' Monsoon" Tewis put up i� the Indian Tea growers as_a sample pf the best qualities of Indian teas. Therefore they use the greatest care in the Selection of the Tea And its blend, that is why they put it up themselves iaind hell it only in the original pAckaires, thereby scouring its purity and exceilaws. Put up in 34 lb., r lb. f s,4 g lb. pAdLagm, and never svlc) in bulk. - ALL'600D GRODERS.KEEP IT. If ur grocer does , kepp it, tell him to write M 1. 8T9E1., OAVTKR A. CKL .' - .''N and 'Ia Front Strom gad, Toronto, weather permi ting. Croton Prine the property of T. C. Oliver, Arantf rd, will make the season of 1895 as folio e : --Monday, April 29th leaves own ata le, Green River, to,J. M. Gerow's Ho te , Brougham noon; by Greenwood to ebert's Hotel,;Brooklin, night. Tues ay, Woodruff''s Hotel, Whitby, noon; Gordons Hotel, Pickering, night. Wednesday, Gormley's Hotel, . Liverpool, noon; own stable and remain all nt ht. Thursday, FranWip House, Markham, noon; Jamb Wider"a's jr. lot 27, con. T Markham, night, Friday, Miller's Hofol, Btouffville, noon; Todd's Hotel, ' Goodwood, night. Saturday, Brown's Hotel, Altana, noon; to own stably and remain until following Mon- day rarornin . The kWve route will be -oomilum d t msh out the so"o n, h"Ith wt+id oiatbor cwt , . r a t .. 3 w,i vag :� "• s' (�� 's -' 4 {�'. �j^ yy S T� W iH .. J d i. M Y M1F S 7 4 - �- h k Yn � 7 i a 4 y tM1 A .: ". 4s, . �` Jt7'' 3{kir•', wi. ..w,.,a.. C- ,:WSRP�.a��. Y - } S u Li . yf L n i t y«t f;',r t r�4't. '• t1i:.._, •; t•- 5 F ,f^ M % ,I 1- Subscribe for the NE -W86 60 ©ents from now until the let of Jan nary. 1896, T1= TA13LB-1110k ring station a.tr.$. TRAINS GOING EAST DUI AS FOLLOWS: -- No.4 EZPRzsi . . 9:89 A. M, •' 14 MIZZ3D G . `. 2:24 P. M. 11 8 LocAL, I. I. , 6:28 P. M. TRAINS GOING WZ8T DUJ As FOLLOWS'---- . No -7 LOCAL 9:15 A. 1117 Mixim . . , . -8:09 P. M. ' 1 EXPREei= I 0 &22 P. M. Timm Ir IR VAS—Dfanbastoa station O: T.S. TRAINS GOING EAAT DUE k9 FOLLO'WS:-- . No. 18 MIXED . . 2:18 P.M. 8' LoOAL .. . . 6:23, P•. M. TRAINS GOING W$sT DUE AS FOLLOWS; -- No. 7 LOCAL 17 MIx"i 3:15 P.M. r �. KENDAII.' PAY1N CURE t©sr sUCCFssFUL REA> FEDY FOR MAN OR BEAST. Qeetata inRl�dp� vee blisters.. KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE, Box 9% 0armui Hendavm co.,1 L, Fob. sit, IL -Dr. 11. J. wxDALL bo. , Dear 8trs-Plesm send me one ofour Korb Books and oblige I have used a great deal of Your Kendall's Spavin Cure with good success It Is a wonderful ppaiedicine. I once a mare that ha4 wdesalt Bpavia and Are bottles cured her. I keeps bottle on hand all the time - Tout's ulo, (IMAs. Pawsrs, KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURES Apr. 3, 02. B. Dr. J. SsimAll ItL CAxtox,o., . Dmr Sim -4 ha "o used several bottles of roar •'Kendall'sSpi,win Caro" with much success• I think it tho bAet liniment I ewer used. Have rb- movwdone Curb, one Bleed Spavin and killed two Bore grovins. Have recooamended It to seventy of my triends who are =%Loh pleased with and keep It. Rmpeotfui S $ It►z, P. O. Bo: 318. For We by all Druggists. or address Dr. B. sr. NEYDALL COMPAYr, MNOODUAGN FALUS. VT. A .. 1....�r.� = RU55 - - I By a new device recently patented in U. S. and Ca-,a.ta by CHAS. CLVTME esrAausHiore7r JRUPTURE .rel...-. 1 CA.aNeBECU® j• WirH NO INCONVENIENCE ITHOUTA RUSS CHCAP BY MAIL ' Your nabr:e to us means comfort to you. A Post Cavi will'da it, 't . -- ° go I'pt•i ._m \x CHASs CLUTHE HE ,:asc immawrial. 134 Kim ST. WE'3T .TORONTO - - • • CANADA DECKER'S LIVERY- i First claw vehicles and horses for hire day or night. 'Tearliing done promptly by` day;or job. 'Bus in connection meet- ing all G T R trains. Freight and express elivero to all parts of . the villiage. 110' &rd, sale and commission stables • . in connection, a,96, . . = Mmmmn. Prop.. PICKHRING - W . E OFFER, - - - . . - To The Public ! ! our cheap and good STATIONARY, -. • SCHOOL Sl1PPLIES, . KNITTING YARNS,. - do FINE W04LS1 Also good Woolen Mitts and. : I -1I Rug Patterns. . M. & E. BOONE, East End � -_ _ PICKERING. _ IDEAL' . � I STEEL WINDMILL � 0 . --WITH— , , �. 'T'EEI. TOWER - no wood used in any part of its construction. CHEAPERH TAN WOOD, 9,11l nioely painted and guaralateed. ` First. Class Spray, Pumps, . - CPEO.EROW, .. •,.%' , :,, R, �. 4 l'4 \. 1: {{ , - .r 4. a 1� x, .+r"n, 1. 7 a't v fK. 3 w f \ d v w r s 9. k r > vl - .. d 2 .:1>< _ _ sn F' 11 FARMERS' MARKET., �;: ' � � TORgNTO June, 20, 1894.7. h , `.1 t'� `. Wheat, fall, ....b....... $ 1 0 90 to 0-00 "i f> .s rz Wheat, spring .........., 0 90 to 000 a e Wheat,red winter...... 00 00 to 0 90 1 ' J ; .. -Wheat, goose 00 00 to 00 88 - • '11 Barley, bush ............. 00 00 to 0047 4 4 Oats, bush ................ 00 41 to 00 42 -- ��; a 00 64 to 00 00 1 Y Peas, bush ................. P IIay, new, ton............ 14 00 to - 17 00 - - " ' Straw, ton 4 60 to 1S Ob 1 k Dressed hogs ............. 0 00 to:_ 600 {' t 1..-., Beef, forequarters......:.. 4 00 to 600` 1.11 Beef, hindquarters......;. 9 00 to 10 00 Mutton.................... e . 7 00 to 8 0o '' f Veal, carotis ........... 5 001to . 700 ' ' Butter, lb .................. 00 18 to 00 00 y" O 'i� f: Eggs, d z .................. 00 11 to 00 00 4 s Potatoes, per bag..... ` 80to 00 }' . i. DOI�tINI�N BANK r ��c � �, a it : � Capital Paid up, , _ $1,500,000 .-21 Surplus, - - $1,500,000 r ;x. �-�� 1. F, WHITBY AGENCY Ofto w Banking sads ness ransacte- ` - , ; f - SAWNG S DEPARTMENT. _ .­ I'ti��terest allowed at highest current rates. No P - - ". notice of withdrawal required. E. J. THORTON, ,; ltldv MANAGER.- JAMES 'HARVEY !, f - ra rr Horseshoer & General Blacksmith, - CL.AREMONT. - 'P * � ` 1.P • • t � .: r . rJ<: New shoed 25o cash or 30c credit, and guaranteed satisfactory. BARRY' S - NEW -- 'SHOP,. - CLAREMONT STATION. A trial solicited. . .. e'. : .. ..1. I- --.,I ­ --. - .. 7 I.. ­ ­ .... ­ - N, . . - I . I.. � .I - 1� I. . . . - �.. s ,!�. ­- . �- 1. . s. . .�. . 1- , . - ..�. I-� ..I ..,. -,-. I -..-.:..�-... : t .And Tin. :.,.. . ....I ..II - . I .- I!.. - I. . . ­, .I. ­. ' 0 :.I ,. -I ..1 .::.: -7-.. 1 . - 1. EMPORIUM e '* - m, 3. .. , , . . Creamers, • M ilk Pans. - , - . Strainer Pails . . : , I. Always -on hand. . `(; • . . . I am iiow prepared to put . . up the -best GaIv. Iron Eavetrough on Short- est notice.- - - 1 a•. Furnace Work a Specialty•. . r�.1. .-edn Pirie's Bl1.ock, • Pickering, TIME MEANS MONEY = _ .A Why waste time and and laber working the, - . pump handle when the wind will do it without expense._ For the small sum 830 you can get one . ,R=ziz"P9-7-'5 lm < roved - - WINDMILLS . P (patent applied for) . • : This machine can be att4 shed to any pump handle without change. . BROUGHAM . ' - . - . .. -' TAILOR.. SHOP- i .. ­ - I . I ..: . 1.' ,' �­ �.--> - .... I - , I... - I have a targe range of samples. of i. Spring - and - Summer Sultings to select from, at prices that will cause You . . much astonishment. - - .•`` Having just received the latent fashion. ,� pls►tesQfro-m Paris, I am now prepared to give entire satisfaction.' Call at once and avoid the rush. A. URQUHART, Brougham. - ; � ; 1 „_ The Page. Coiled Spring - •.. Woven Wire . • . N_. .; s'�" . . 0. (Best Fence in the World•) - .• -- t 'I . Will turn anything in the Animal Kingdom, from a hen to an elephant. Is no soft wire that needs tightening every spring Only re- quires 3 poste to the 100 feet and will last a life " ,. - ' � time. For sample see S. LiLnton's, Kingston •� Road, or on premises of the undersigned, 29 4t W. F. R. JONES,AAg�ent. •` r ,F - Ba1tI&m P.O. 111 For Sale. .`� , x (food second bland Light Wagon anti -. Baggy for su'.e, also & few -good carts at a f i Ha E4 . — e -$ { # }: ;� ... .. - .8 ck ROA4 - ­ -� R. B. --=ale the �f rietor is giving op Iz bill s,6 Rrodll 1b :, WW be ti9s of fit. �#• 4 _ 9 J 4 i i Y } y t A .�, y. , f r k rX- �. t •: y� i �,. a- t x� br s +'� _T� j� 1it... ,w to ,' eV �« �' �'' ' �1 W - _ ._- !OREENWO D . .-1 - 1.. .; -_ . - Mrs. Edwar -Gleeson a d fam 1v have -- • just returned from visiting 'friends in the T J1 ,- cit . Lome to Bro gham on Monday evening - - next for strawberries and -to hear the - - - Whitby choir.. . Mrs. Patrick Larkin, Df Toionto, is '� spending a few days With Tim and George O'Leary. her brothers, rM - Gleeson and Levi M *ey have gone on a fishing e x`pedition up week- We expeot Aurora way this somebi the next few months. fish yarns for I The rough stories have been removed i from the highway opposite the ick Dire � 4i perty,, through the bush Java ot•ygt been but t�e holes filled. giT es rig .as much of a jot hole i aaoad as doe�a Rose. We pe this wW be reps' ed st Doe. 1 r w r .fd {• . Y -� _ d 4 t: { tiT da 5. •u {b M - FI ,r. S i A EY L Y 4 X {. t r •9 i 7: -c 5. ✓ -J 'f is $} f Z. ,4 a . 4 -y r r' ,'`.y`.'f$-Jill Y,i"S'f ,,p �^ g z i - �? i`"t' W14" -gid �y�k•� 'A € �' # 3° '- f i x � m. .. ����,, , �ta W IS , i` . I H E , .,.1.., •' II :NEST - CA-. , N TME WORLD ­.I - I --.. EA -I... FROM THE A PLANT TO THE T[A CUP IN ITS NATIVE PURITY. • 1. I '' Monsoon" Tewis put up i� the Indian Tea growers as_a sample pf the best qualities of Indian teas. Therefore they use the greatest care in the Selection of the Tea And its blend, that is why they put it up themselves iaind hell it only in the original pAckaires, thereby scouring its purity and exceilaws. Put up in 34 lb., r lb. f s,4 g lb. pAdLagm, and never svlc) in bulk. - ALL'600D GRODERS.KEEP IT. If ur grocer does , kepp it, tell him to write M 1. 8T9E1., OAVTKR A. CKL .' - .''N and 'Ia Front Strom gad, Toronto, weather permi ting. Croton Prine the property of T. C. Oliver, Arantf rd, will make the season of 1895 as folio e : --Monday, April 29th leaves own ata le, Green River, to,J. M. Gerow's Ho te , Brougham noon; by Greenwood to ebert's Hotel,;Brooklin, night. Tues ay, Woodruff''s Hotel, Whitby, noon; Gordons Hotel, Pickering, night. Wednesday, Gormley's Hotel, . Liverpool, noon; own stable and remain all nt ht. Thursday, FranWip House, Markham, noon; Jamb Wider"a's jr. lot 27, con. T Markham, night, Friday, Miller's Hofol, Btouffville, noon; Todd's Hotel, ' Goodwood, night. Saturday, Brown's Hotel, Altana, noon; to own stably and remain until following Mon- day rarornin . The kWve route will be -oomilum d t msh out the so"o n, h"Ith wt+id oiatbor cwt , . r a t .. 3 w,i vag :� "• s' (�� 's -' 4 {�'. �j^ yy S T� W iH .. J d i. M Y M1F S 7 4 - �- h k Yn � 7 i a 4 y tM1 A .: ". 4s, . �` Jt7'' 3{kir•', wi. ..w,.,a.. C- ,:WSRP�.a��. Y - } S u Li . yf L n i t y«t f;',r t r�4't. '• t1i:.._, •; t•- 5 F ,f^ M % ,I 1- Subscribe for the NE -W86 60 ©ents from now until the let of Jan nary. 1896, T1= TA13LB-1110k ring station a.tr.$. TRAINS GOING EAST DUI AS FOLLOWS: -- No.4 EZPRzsi . . 9:89 A. M, •' 14 MIZZ3D G . `. 2:24 P. M. 11 8 LocAL, I. I. , 6:28 P. M. TRAINS GOING WZ8T DUJ As FOLLOWS'---- . No -7 LOCAL 9:15 A. 1117 Mixim . . , . -8:09 P. M. ' 1 EXPREei= I 0 &22 P. M. Timm Ir IR VAS—Dfanbastoa station O: T.S. TRAINS GOING EAAT DUE k9 FOLLO'WS:-- . No. 18 MIXED . . 2:18 P.M. 8' LoOAL .. . . 6:23, P•. M. TRAINS GOING W$sT DUE AS FOLLOWS; -- No. 7 LOCAL 17 MIx"i 3:15 P.M. r �. KENDAII.' PAY1N CURE t©sr sUCCFssFUL REA> FEDY FOR MAN OR BEAST. Qeetata inRl�dp� vee blisters.. KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE, Box 9% 0armui Hendavm co.,1 L, Fob. sit, IL -Dr. 11. J. wxDALL bo. , Dear 8trs-Plesm send me one ofour Korb Books and oblige I have used a great deal of Your Kendall's Spavin Cure with good success It Is a wonderful ppaiedicine. I once a mare that ha4 wdesalt Bpavia and Are bottles cured her. I keeps bottle on hand all the time - Tout's ulo, (IMAs. Pawsrs, KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURES Apr. 3, 02. B. Dr. J. SsimAll ItL CAxtox,o., . Dmr Sim -4 ha "o used several bottles of roar •'Kendall'sSpi,win Caro" with much success• I think it tho bAet liniment I ewer used. Have rb- movwdone Curb, one Bleed Spavin and killed two Bore grovins. Have recooamended It to seventy of my triends who are =%Loh pleased with and keep It. Rmpeotfui S $ It►z, P. O. Bo: 318. For We by all Druggists. or address Dr. B. sr. NEYDALL COMPAYr, MNOODUAGN FALUS. VT. A .. 1....�r.� = RU55 - - I By a new device recently patented in U. S. and Ca-,a.ta by CHAS. CLVTME esrAausHiore7r JRUPTURE .rel...-. 1 CA.aNeBECU® j• WirH NO INCONVENIENCE ITHOUTA RUSS CHCAP BY MAIL ' Your nabr:e to us means comfort to you. A Post Cavi will'da it, 't . -- ° go I'pt•i ._m \x CHASs CLUTHE HE ,:asc immawrial. 134 Kim ST. WE'3T .TORONTO - - • • CANADA DECKER'S LIVERY- i First claw vehicles and horses for hire day or night. 'Tearliing done promptly by` day;or job. 'Bus in connection meet- ing all G T R trains. Freight and express elivero to all parts of . the villiage. 110' &rd, sale and commission stables • . in connection, a,96, . . = Mmmmn. Prop.. PICKHRING - W . E OFFER, - - - . . - To The Public ! ! our cheap and good STATIONARY, -. • SCHOOL Sl1PPLIES, . KNITTING YARNS,. - do FINE W04LS1 Also good Woolen Mitts and. : I -1I Rug Patterns. . M. & E. BOONE, East End � -_ _ PICKERING. _ IDEAL' . � I STEEL WINDMILL � 0 . --WITH— , , �. 'T'EEI. TOWER - no wood used in any part of its construction. CHEAPERH TAN WOOD, 9,11l nioely painted and guaralateed. ` First. Class Spray, Pumps, . - CPEO.EROW, .. •,.%' , :,, R, �. 4 l'4 \. 1: {{ , - .r 4. a 1� x, .+r"n, 1. 7 a't v fK. 3 w f \ d v w r s 9. k r > vl - .. d 2 .:1>< _ _ sn F' 11 FARMERS' MARKET., �;: ' � � TORgNTO June, 20, 1894.7. h , `.1 t'� `. Wheat, fall, ....b....... $ 1 0 90 to 0-00 "i f> .s rz Wheat, spring .........., 0 90 to 000 a e Wheat,red winter...... 00 00 to 0 90 1 ' J ; .. -Wheat, goose 00 00 to 00 88 - • '11 Barley, bush ............. 00 00 to 0047 4 4 Oats, bush ................ 00 41 to 00 42 -- ��; a 00 64 to 00 00 1 Y Peas, bush ................. P IIay, new, ton............ 14 00 to - 17 00 - - " ' Straw, ton 4 60 to 1S Ob 1 k Dressed hogs ............. 0 00 to:_ 600 {' t 1..-., Beef, forequarters......:.. 4 00 to 600` 1.11 Beef, hindquarters......;. 9 00 to 10 00 Mutton.................... e . 7 00 to 8 0o '' f Veal, carotis ........... 5 001to . 700 ' ' Butter, lb .................. 00 18 to 00 00 y" O 'i� f: Eggs, d z .................. 00 11 to 00 00 4 s Potatoes, per bag..... ` 80to 00 }' . i. DOI�tINI�N BANK r ��c � �, a it : � Capital Paid up, , _ $1,500,000 .-21 Surplus, - - $1,500,000 r ;x. �-�� 1. F, WHITBY AGENCY Ofto w Banking sads ness ransacte- ` - , ; f - SAWNG S DEPARTMENT. _ .­ I'ti��terest allowed at highest current rates. No P - - ". notice of withdrawal required. E. J. THORTON, ,; ltldv MANAGER.- JAMES 'HARVEY !, f - ra rr Horseshoer & General Blacksmith, - CL.AREMONT. - 'P * � ` 1.P • • t � .: r . rJ<: New shoed 25o cash or 30c credit, and guaranteed satisfactory. BARRY' S - NEW -- 'SHOP,. - CLAREMONT STATION. A trial solicited. . .. e'. : .. ..1. I- --.,I ­ --. - .. 7 I.. ­ ­ .... ­ - N, . . - I . I.. � .I - 1� I. . . . - �.. s ,!�. ­- . �- 1. . s. . .�. . 1- , . - ..�. I-� ..I ..,. -,-. I -..-.:..�-... : t .And Tin. :.,.. . ....I ..II - . I .- I!.. - I. . . ­, .I. ­. ' 0 :.I ,. -I ..1 .::.: -7-.. 1 . - 1. EMPORIUM e '* - m, 3. .. , , . . Creamers, • M ilk Pans. - , - . Strainer Pails . . : , I. Always -on hand. . `(; • . . . I am iiow prepared to put . . up the -best GaIv. Iron Eavetrough on Short- est notice.- - - 1 a•. Furnace Work a Specialty•. . r�.1. .-edn Pirie's Bl1.ock, • Pickering, TIME MEANS MONEY = _ .A Why waste time and and laber working the, - . pump handle when the wind will do it without expense._ For the small sum 830 you can get one . ,R=ziz"P9-7-'5 lm < roved - - WINDMILLS . P (patent applied for) . • : This machine can be att4 shed to any pump handle without change. . BROUGHAM . ' - . - . .. -' TAILOR.. SHOP- i .. ­ - I . I ..: . 1.' ,' �­ �.--> - .... I - , I... - I have a targe range of samples. of i. Spring - and - Summer Sultings to select from, at prices that will cause You . . much astonishment. - - .•`` Having just received the latent fashion. ,� pls►tesQfro-m Paris, I am now prepared to give entire satisfaction.' Call at once and avoid the rush. A. URQUHART, Brougham. - ; � ; 1 „_ The Page. Coiled Spring - •.. Woven Wire . • . N_. .; s'�" . . 0. (Best Fence in the World•) - .• -- t 'I . Will turn anything in the Animal Kingdom, from a hen to an elephant. Is no soft wire that needs tightening every spring Only re- quires 3 poste to the 100 feet and will last a life " ,. - ' � time. For sample see S. LiLnton's, Kingston •� Road, or on premises of the undersigned, 29 4t W. F. R. JONES,AAg�ent. •` r ,F - Ba1tI&m P.O. 111 For Sale. .`� , x (food second bland Light Wagon anti -. Baggy for su'.e, also & few -good carts at a f i Ha E4 . — e -$ { # }: ;� ... .. - .8 ck ROA4 - ­ -� R. B. --=ale the �f rietor is giving op Iz bill s,6 Rrodll 1b :, WW be ti9s of fit. �#• 4 _ 9 J 4 i i Y } y t A .�, y. , f r k rX- �. t •: y� i �,. a- t x� br s +'� _T� j� 1it... ,w to ,' eV �« �' �'' ' �1 W . � � . z -o , � . I .. .. . I I I .- - - . - z.gt - 11 W, -- -- I '. I � . I - � . !. , . . I ­1,-�o­ft-.1eJXV-2p aw � 1, I � . � �- - � I . . . � I . - . .. I.." - . I . - . 4 .1. - -t I 11 - � . . . �, . � , - ,� - , . � . �. - , 01" W- . � ". . , - �. ". - . - -� � I � I I -­ . �- - . I ". , I I . � , . � � 4 : ., � . tF� ., � �11 . I , N I 1. - , - . I I - - -. 1 .�. I ,ii, -m ,-�-/ wv--a, .4. ­ . 1. . T11 - z I I . - '� - ­X� 01� 41 ". R - .- - � �� . . �­ 4 11 .., . , , � t45�A&-Ai�a I 1. ­ . - - 111 , ... . I � . � - . .1 . . - .* * �`��- --i --I,--. -i' '. I ­ ; 1. - - � , � , . -Aw --- �W4 AO� - �­ I , , , , , , , , Q� � -41 1 ­46,�-, -4 - - � , -, , A , , , I . - , , .: I . � I i "% I . - _ I Wt,k, , , I ::. . , - :... - � . - . :.� , '��l . 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L1, 11 ANT%-.- . . 1. ­ . �­ . , ­­ . ­ ­ -- 1. .11 . �'.' I . - - . I 1. ­ . � ­ . - � -. �. .-.-.. . -- - I ­- , - -...... ­­­:� . . - - . ­.. ­. If ,, . ... 1. - 11. -�:.�'. - ---.. I -, -t-..,.� ., . ..; . -. ­ I... ­..Fk� . ; � T . . i j.:� ­ - , 111I .. `� . -1 - � - i 1. � . I:..,,-:.. n6t wish peOple.tD fear MO. . Why should . . - :.� .. ,:�..:­., - - ' . - I ­ '. . . ; . I � .. ­ - -1 . ; ­ 1". . th .01). ..- ,:.. �-- ' , ey. - . : �� ifer 'titt�' � t . � � ink, Min Deantond,' I h I . . � .:,� � &I go "I do not suppcee you do ; but you have , . I . - . - , . . ­ - �:. ". abroiad next. week," sai( Mrs. 8a,ville, a dominant will, which wealth gives you . � . � -- . - . I breaking sileace ope dull, drizzlifig, the power to axe oise, and it colors y�ir I ' L ' . - - . L ,- i i manner." `[ . . . I --... � depressing November day, when they were "I -have always lbeen well served."' . - I , , , . . . i .-L, �, . .;� : I �1. .. -. - sitting by the fire in the smaller of thd two " No doubt." I � L , . . ­ ' . . . . � I . - �L-" - you have interest- . I I.: drawing.rooma. Mrs. Saville hadibeen in ."Well, Miss De1smond, . �-. ' - I . � I . . � ... ad me a good deal, amd, as you say, when. .. - . ­ deal. thought, and Hope diligently maki - - 1�. ­.. ng g- ical, or you grow too . 1. I . - .. ,�, occupi ever I row rann " . . - 1. - a long strip of lace which .Usually : ed . I ..: �- �411. - ­ fearless; we can part company. Atanyrate, , - .. - -. . her when t-9te-a-tete with her patroness and you are more of a rational being than most - - . .. I . ": . . , '..�- ' B,Ioud. ' Now as 4 my plans for - 1- I ­ not readin i young women. ,O .. . - j! .g . L . � . . , , . � - - :,. --:-. - . O'Do.you wislit me to XC0cmpanY�,J'OU,T""-f this winter,. I cannot stand being worried . . I ,:�,­ I I . .... I .. .... "Yes, of course. - You &is very �eady to - by the people I k ow in London, and my . 1. I L . � ­ - . - relations ; so I propose -going to Dresden, a - 4 I 1. . , . leave me." I town where one in,,ets few English. I hkyo . I . - � . . I . - . - . . . . . -.-. - "No, indeed, Mr'i. Saville ; I,ah�ula .be had enoughof my compatt iota for Lhepreseat. ' I . . - . . ; . . . .1 . - . i h - I shall come to Piris in the spring ; and . I sorry to do so ; but I win I rou to feel quite . .... 1. 11 . . . 1, I . , after -oh, that is too remote Lo think of. � -1 . . I . 11. free. The secret of tc-:Jgm�ort in ,such a I had a, letLor viis morning ,from Mary ; - - . � -, , . . I . �. . . - 1 . �' . : - ''.. relationship as ours. is th at we ire not Dacre. She is staying in Yorkshire, ' at . . . - . :; 4* some wild country house, . where she . . - bound to each oth or. " . I I . . - . . I 1. � I .�. � - . . . ., : . 1. I -� , hunts ots in moderit-youug- :. -.� . There waR ano0er pause .1 �- .. I . , � ... .1. .. . - . . . a .... . . . � - lady fashic' . She threatens tq� re- . . . � ' . I , . - . .1 "Very likely," resumed ra. Sa,,ille. ,- . 1--l-, - ... I an turn here with her obedient father o the . . - . 1p:� -, %..� �- : ... if she had been rbflecting. 'Howev r, I do "ith and that idiot George Lumley im, her - . ... - I . - � - . . �.. I must train. Lady Olivia writes that the pr er- - �­ ... . not wish to part company as yet. Nr,, I , ; -1. . . I � , . :­ . ence dear Mary Dacre shown with su-h . . � � .­- say you are Oita of the fe oung w men- . . w for dear George is I -.. �, . . . girlish simplioit . - �� ... -­: indeed, young -or old -who have any ,;Om- quite touching. f course the Lumleye . . �. I . . . I ­ - . . . . I . . . . % �.. - I , - men sense./though your deas oii some are enchanted at �!he poinibility of such a .. . , ­ � . . . . . I ... �. points are by no means sou d. " . I marriage. I won er (fees it ever occur to . - � . ­ . . ­­ "What are my chief error ?" &.site I d Hope them to count up the number of aspirants 1-1 1. ' , . � � .- I I � I t- ­ - M . I Miss Dacre has encouraged and thrown. : ,. ' F -,. 7 �.. - " with the pleasant fearloss eas wh ch was � ­ . `1 � over I I do not myself quite understand � , - ,.- - - � I one of her chief attractions o the ii �erlous why Qeorge LunA ' - � I . ; I ery hung about here so . I - . �. . I .. ittle plutocrat. . i . much. I fancy lie wae rather laughing at � �-, � � -. .: - : ­. Ix I -.. - . . I . the future Baroness Castleton; and he in too . -- . - . '. .: ,",You are a sentiment lini i� some .-- I . much a Saville to do what, he doeen't like, . . . . - directions, and y.pu do not recog I. the. even for a wealt .-I . , ., - . 1?i marriage." I .1 � true value o = , I . � ... f money. The Arst is w less; "I must say, Mrip. Savill4b, that seems to -1 - ..,. ' I., I 'ight direction." . ­ .- . . I the second, wilful blindness, " I , .me erring in the q � -, . .7 - . ­ . -1 I - 9'je, "I supposa it . �does, to you. To me it . "I dare say I am weak," tl T," seems weak gel indulgence, when you , . . . - . I - I I . I I 1. .. �0 . laying down her %vork and jileaki�"`g consider the posi��tion George Lumley is �. - . .-- -, . - - - I . ' I � . :. :- ... .,- .thoughtfully ; "but do you know, M� born to, and which he is bound Lo keup I . I - f 17 � . . - . .. Saville, I think I have a trier esti ate up. . . . . I . .., I I . � I - ..;: �1" � ..What a terril4le birthrivht I" returned �'­ '. : the value of money than yo irself ?"-; � � . -.. I _ Hope Desmond, laughivi:, as she resumed � . .- '. .1 q "How do you make tbat Out!" Mrs- hat lacework, aiM. -tea. coming in at th t - ­ � a . . . 11 � � � 1. - - . . . � .. . , �.. . ., -. . ; . Saville spoke with sorpe degree of intereaL moment, the conversation was interrupted. ' . - . . - . I - ­ � . . .. . I I After a few days' rest, Mrs. Savil.le net .. . . "I know that a cortai iount is neces� . . - I a at .- - i . . ,:: - . I out for Germany, and in the quiet routine . : . . . -. . . � sary, that rear poverty is cegrading, that of their comfortable life there the current . .. ; . . � I . . ­ - . - . I . . L - every right-minded indiv�jual will strive of -this 'lower tr..e tale" seem F. d to. stag- � .. . I ..-..- .1 a i I nate. , 1� : i . . . . � � . - -. . nd toil for a sufficiency, en )ugh to r Fecure . � -.., - - - .. �� I .. . � . .. . .;6-, ., . , . - . � I � , . . ., 12. - . : . I rideperdefict, and respectabi ity ; but, fter �!­ - � - I . �, , - ,;. , � , .. I �. .. f . . a . .. i, I..�� : - I -: (11[�PTER VIII :;'-. , . , ­� � . . ... . I . . - - that, what can money buy ?� Not health,.nor .- � '- - . I . - . � . . " - ­ . . . . Back in bright Paris, now decked in � 1. I �.. a sense of enjoyment, intelligence, rior the .., . . I . � her garden-pany dress of ohentout-blossome . 1. �,.: perception of beatuy, nor that crown ol Maus aind I&burribms, some six or seven . . .I- . I- ..- life, love. Very moderate means 'will per. months afterwaroft. � : - � � �'. - 1. -.1 - *. - mit of fullest pleasure in all �hese, but they Mrs. Saville had spent a very tranquil . " - I ­ I . winter. She had rarely been free from .1.. .:. - .-. must be all the free gih of natur' gold .. .- � 1, 4� - irritation for so long a period. I . � ­.. % . cannot buy them." - . . - . .. . 1. ' ­ . For a week or two at Christm - .. .. -1 . . - "And with them- all") returrA M to. been a good de**4 tried liya visit from her. . . . . . - I :� 11: . ..�. . � - 1. Saville, "you can never lift your head soni.-� Who, to . er surprise, brought his � . .. . . .. - - . .- . above the obscurity of a mean position, it cousin, George iumley, with him. That . . �� �-..- over site settled IdoW'n again to her b(wkg, -1 - . -.. - you only possess'nioderat - a means." her fancy -work, � of whic� she Wa4 rather - . . . . . . - I.- --­ ­ . "That does not seem a hardship i'o The. proud, lier gaino' (if wili8l. %ith home old . . . . � . � .. - I � I ... �. It is true I never knew what ambition Grafe and Baroilis attached to the littie I . - I . ,.. . - I... � .., �- I- meant, and therefore I am uo'fair judge of court, 8DIlis of whom had dal)bled indiplo. � . - I . ..-- I . . I - I Macy and (van slienL a few yenra in l.ondon ­ . . .., � what, is essential to an -ambi �iods spirit; but and frequent visi�ts to the opera, for almost . . -1 � . . . -. .. , � . men have attained to great ,.3ower and yet her only re%l ple4sure was music. - - I . . I . - . -. . -. . . I . had but little money." . ' ' I ' If, six monthel before, Mre. Saville had . I . - , .-: I% - . "Not often, -not of to 1 ; hile to - 1�omen missed , her companion what% she was absent . ­. � I... . - . - � �.. with their more limit,ed op iere, Mon -.Y1 is for a couple of disya, the idea of parting * ... .1 -. - -, �. still more essential. It ev, �ry onti -;Wan as with her now wfluld have strw!k her with ' . � � . I -. I ,philosophic as yourself, w iere should we dismay. �,-Iie had. softened gradually but ---- . �1 . - . i . be? Where would civilization, invetidont considgsrably,-�-ao gradually that - Hope . . . . . ­.. . . - . .-.. - . - .- improvement, employment t)e, if men di] Desmond had to look'back and recall her - . . .. � . I not haste to be ome rich?" first improo-sions t,o measure the change. . � - ,1 . .1.1 . "But I �o not object, to pitople be6orniug Tile weather *as fine, the sky blue, and - � - .1 . . - � . .: . . : . rich, and I &.-knowledge that men -who ,sunshine beautified all. things. It seemed . � .. -- . - ­ .. ... smash -large fortunes are often benefactors impossible not to partake of tho general " - . I . . I : I � - - to -their fellows. I -only urge th ' at: great exhilaration which pervaded the &tine$- .. . .1 - wealth is not essential to individual !happi. pherii. Yet M m Saville's expression, it Is" -. I- I - .. . ... . ness, and that men who inci ease knowledge hard, was infinitely sadder than formerly,. ­ 1. ..- 4 and social improvement, who ihvaut and an -d. though Miss Ddamond's eyes were . . . � .1 . , .�, - explore, are benefactors equ Ily with, those calm and her air -composed, there were . - .. . . which pays -for it shadows beneath the former and a some- - �. : - .. , . I . � � � �- -.1 gall." . � what worn look in her expressive face. � . - � "We are like the two koights who fought She waii thinner, too, as if she had borngo . � � '--- 'over the color of the shield, Miss Desmond * some mentiLl strain. I . . -1. - I b It was afternoon, and the Champte. Myna" - ,. '- . You must grant that if we& th cannot uy I . . . I I 1. -- _- health it caa at least miti -,&to sufforin were crowded with streams of equipages r : . i : . , - I$ 9-; . -. ... 1� . and it certainly, can buy eat mail if it can- pouring out to the Bois. Stemming this . . .-. not buy love. As to love, i rho fools xcept c - urrent, Mrs. Saville and Hope re-,urned .1, . - Al - - 1. . � . . from their earlier drive, and on arriving at . . . -: -: I I the young and the imagluouve? It in but . . I .. ..-. I another form of selfialitz"Is ; some quality the. hotel, found another open earriage :-. , .- 1. -a ea you I , I ;� in nether' 1 tifi or f atters you, and dra %a up at the entrance, from which a ­ . -�'. - yo:thiuk Lfat person offer tial to your ex. gOrgeously-dressed lady was leaning while - ,�. � 11 . atie spoke to the per - . 1­.� - . . . I istence " . ter. Herns.d6h,gesturie , - * � - - ' - . . . � ..- . . 7. . $*There is something mofe in it t"n towards the now arrival, whereupon the . - : ,� ..�, that?" said Hope, gently ; "you must knew lady looked round and displayed the well- :- . . �.-� .. that. Did you never love any one ,your- known features of Mine D&cro. / - -, ., , self ?" . i " How fortunate I " she cried. 11 Here, / �.: - - - - I I Yes-; at loan t I though t I did, and small "Per' the door; lot me out I" And sha - - - - . ­ . oprang upon the ground. - 1�.. .-1. I' thanks I had for it, But I am not sure I �: ­ ' - -. -11�­ that my reason is not too strong .for my 'My dear Mrs. Saville, I -only'Itat heard, w. _- . I - . t ,.-­­.�, - -� I !ieli affeCtiOUL " byl the Merest accident that on were in � . - . � I ��.. .. �. �, - 64 1 think," said Hope slowly, "that you Paris. We have been at ;an for two, � , ` ­ 1. could love very much." She stopped and months, and are on our way home." , � - . .- - . ­ - I d 1!0h, endeM," returned Mrs. Saville, -. .. - grew a little paler than usual. "Par on . I I I . . ., -. '-- me if I take a liberty in speaking my descended very -.,. - . I . ,� . . deliberately end submitted to be kined by ..--: � - I opinion. " . ,� I.- , . � � - I I . I her young friend. "I am sorry for your . . - "No ; go on ; you'amuse me. - ;�.� '. - " I I . -- - :- " - � . - -. . . . . -.��."%.,.... "We scarcely know wh&� gifts posa. poor father. Why could you not lot him . . . - � rest in peace among his turnips and . - . . . - .. . . ass till circum-staigiods- ball them out, and ogle wurzels?" ,-,­- -.1--yourli-may not have drawn out your lacul. m` . - � . , �� . - . ties in that direction.' But I am quite our - a - "Why, I -must think of myself sometimes, , � , now..HowdoVou do, Hopellam ­­ - u%til you it , . � ..., -.:" -.- . the remarkable strength of your re so glad to'see you I I cannot say you are .-. - - , - I �.,�.� . would make your love st,rong too." . :...� -.-,- .1. - - - "Really, M ins Dasmond, you area pro.. look.ing very flourishing. I suppose you are ­.... 11 ,.. - . -, I 1 '. � , .41 D, so I can pay you a Dios visit, � . : - I - ' "'. found student #if human nature. Unf;r* th I have a �undred and - one things - . . .I-'. � : tunately for the devel meat of Y coming I -�, Ong ..: .­ ­ I to do. I suppose you -have your old rooms .. - ­:_ affections, I am not what in called a lovable ... I I - � ...'' .­: ,r?� 1`1 I Mrs. .Saville. We are at the Bristol. � 1. - z . �.` person. I � .. - . . - -1. Z, .. ., ­ I I �.. .- i I wonder you otay here, it is so slow." � - . . .. I . : . : I ; . I . '. � ope, quiii , - h for me ;. - but oome . .,.. I'— .: I �.. - �0. "No " said H tl F, "not whaii a "Quite fast enong �. . . . - . . i . - -. . ,:;. 117 . surf;;2; observer would call lovable ; you upstairs." . � . , - I - , - a . � : ­ - axe too contemptuous of w 3aknams, .which, 618he in " cro as ever," whispered Mine .� .., I . -11 . I , , � , . I I YOU cannot understand ; b it if steadiness D "'re to Hope an they asoonded to Mm. ­ ; 1. - . . . . :,I. . , - - of purp,6ss,.s6 sense of just, ce, honor, and Saville'@ apartmenta. "I don't wonder at .- -: .. ..; I �., �- -,-.-. - . - loyaltyj are worthy of love, you ought w your looking worn out." Hope laughed - . -:­ _ . . -1 ., --. ., �- �,�-. be loved. ' When I came a you, my first and -Shook her head. � - . I �­ � 1-j. I ... ­ .. . inclinaL.'on was to fear yo , and I deter. "You are comfortable siough here, t . , ---i", `., I .r.�. . I ...,-- mined not to yield to it, r if I found it must nay," resumed Miss Daere, looking ..., insurmountable, to leave you. You cannot, round the haDdsomely-farnished room, %- .- . ..� . -W. � - f- ,I*, 1 support ithe companionship of a spirit which was sweet with flowers and flooded .: - 1".. I -- I I .1 -- . I - .-1 f ior to your own. . . . . . . � - in er I � ': -: r1.1 with soft light, the strong sunshine filterivi; .1. � - "' .!�,% I "And you consider yours equal n-'a"mine ?" through the outer b1hids. . ,­­ - - I .,:­�'- .� , asked Mrs. Saville, with a slight smile. - , c,Well i .: '. - I , dear him Saville, and how an -1 �, .; ;­.- -"­ 1. . � " I do," returned Hope, steadily. ;" You- you af ter burying yourselfalive in Germany 1. ., . I . , m , .... . . are myouperior in knowledge, in experience, all.the winter? It if such &queer pleas, to go : . I . . . . I. - - in ability,in strength and will; but my opip. to.,, - I . .i. -- . I I . .1'. �: ;-... . ioni, my individuality, are my own; I will "I like, Gormany,and.1 am remarkably -1 I � ­... . , . - . . . - . - ­... . ­ - .,., never yield them to the mere authority of 4ell.", . - - -s - - . I .. . .. -:; " . . �­ -. any creature, even to one I reppect as I do "Well,,` Yft don't lbok-I& We had a I ;. _ . I I � � 7; 1. - � 1.1; you. If, in speaking as I think, I 6ffend, " , , . - wild time at Elarcloidyke. I was there for . .:.... I .. .. � - . 0. j. 'We are not bound to I ive together a moment nearly a mouth. Lady Olivia is quitte top I - - . . �,.,­ . I .. I - � -�­ ­. . !­:­ longer that in agreeable. I may, l9ve you good.qatured,,, Then . she and t4s, girls . - : . . . . . - . I �­�. 7 .- '', ene day ; I w0l never &lie w� myself to fear came Over io mitleton. but your son per. ,;. ­ . . . I - , : ; . is . I � - .­- ; ­�. fluaded George Lumley to go with him to , .. I Ton. - .­. - : ,- - ,--. so . - I : � 7� - '.. - �.�. - Ton Ai1iliatfi A­6til1!`idffs girl. 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I - - . -� ; - '. - , � .. : '!- � .:, . ; , . ­ � .� �­ I . . . . : - . � I . , I 1� � : : - . I . . . � . . �. � - .� : , I . . � .1 .. - I .. . � ,- -1� . - . - . � � "I . r - - . - . . .1 -, 1� - :1 '.: I . � . . . I. . . . -- - - - -- - - r .: I,- � i - I . i I � - . , -, -- - - . . - I - ­ - - -if - ­­� - . . I. .� . .. I - - ' I . . I - ­ . , . anilem now aould he desert 0111 do not got on at all - I have W but, -', ' * ' -.4'. when he returned, friandlesso p* . -� I . ­ I ". I - I , - . - Lumley was te at I met her, being the man he in ? how could he one o.hanoo of pleading foi him, and I ain - ' - I -1 ­ . '. .. �-. �­ . - - :': � . . . -said it was God-foriotten-hole I o impression Alm . . I ,Mr. Vig.nolles at Pau, '­eto-, etc And help her elfectually save as her husbantO ? It afraid I made little or.n * * . w. . . . 0111111 �, was imprudent, I know, and- very -wrong, Saville has' been profoundly offended . I .... m .1. -1 Miss Dacre tu nod on a rapid flow of 9 i "I ; - 1. , - I - ' - . . ,�­ , . � As soon its a made a pause for breat but not unpardonable. Dear MrL Saville, Naturally she will dud it h" to forgive. I., ­ � - -.-.1 I think how unhappy your son must be, part� 448he is somewhat . ademau tins. - If you , . . . - - -, . Mrs. Saville a Id. wearily: - . - . - . "MISS Des end, the tea is ready. Give ad from you as he its, and, oh, think of the succeed with her - I @hall say you are a - . . . .- .: . sad future of self-reproach and regret you deucedly clever young woman. still, I am . !,.� .. . � . .'r . -- me " - I must tell Hugh .. �, 4 a cup. - his- unhappy wife." inclined to back you. " .. � . #BY all &no. The Parfaians have are creating fot a he h&L I had - � . - . -. . improved im ensely�, but they have nit "Do not talk such sentimental rubbish to I what a flrot-rsto advooAt . � . -. . . --. arrived at the height of good afternoon tegs, me, Mine Desmond. It fit aot like year a letter from him a fow days ago. His .- - I .. . I I I � .. yet. " '- . usual quiet, good sense. His Mr. Rawson ship will be out of cosaminsion-lot me. ' C 10 , Silence on t a part of Mrs. -,qaville . , while laced you with me t,o plead 1:1 ugh's cause? see, in long than five months. The present � - ' - Miss Dactre i )pe4 her to&.-' I ff so, it its wasted ingenuity. I will not be First Lord in an old 6ohool-fallow of mine , - . : . - . -.. a He must . �. - .. " When do on come back to London, Mrs. Wked over ; nor does Hugh think it worth and he wants a lift with him. - . I .. , I . . while to make any 'attempt at recionoiling_ L keep up, you know, now he in a marriago' ' . . . - � Saville ?" - . 1. . Man,­�.poor beggar I- Then, in a way I so . I . . . . . - ­ . "Not this 1 ear. I tray,go, to Inglefield Lion. " - - - . . . - I - in the auttim i." .. "Probably he fears it would embitter responsible for his sins." , ' ­ . . L. � . . "I suppom you know Richard in,bring. you were he to try. " . - 66 Oh, indeed I' said Hope, looking at L. �. - ; .1 . - ing out a wor c on 'The Romano in L ncoln. "No I It is pride and obstinacy. He has him with eager, earnest eyes. . ­ . . � iihire,'illustra ,ed, with notes and appendixes something of my own nature. How Vroud I I Yqo ; I knew old Hilt -on for years, off - - - . . . 11 ad lib. ? It ill cost a imall fortune they I was of him once !" . I and on. -He wasn't a bad fellow at all,- - I I . .. I L Bay. 0) � . "And so you will be again," cried Hope very much in my own line ; d6nd I am not , - I - . . . . - I . � I , I 1. . "They say Who nay 'r! L _. ' . cheerfully. Ill-'oolion, faulty, he may be, at all a had fellow, I assure you." . -. I . . . "Ohl the I I terary world. 'I am thinking but he has done nothing unworthy of a " I am sure you are not," returned . , 1. L . I . - I . - of publishing eytracts from the Archives of man of honor. Does a marriage of-affece Hope, with a caressing ismile.' . . .. ­ . - Castleton F(reat. There are lota'of old tion incaptioitate a man from distinguish- ohdo What a sweet soul you are to say so I". : - . . . . . : . .- .- deeda'and le tern in the muniment-room, ing himself, in his prpfession ? Do ct�ing all his still white tooth in a gonii%V, - - . . . .. I I - . especially ab ut the Long Parliament timeL YOU Dot believe that when the heart in. LI&Ugh. . - . � . . - . . . II . One must re lly write something now." shtisfied and at re.nL; the intellect works " Then be, Hugh 'Met the dstughter,- . . . ... -. - - . "indeed I .Can't you compile a time. more freely and clearly ?" an uncommon gir4 I believe; sang divinely.- . ''. '-.. . - . I table of the rains between Castle Long Upton "And do you think that the heart will and all that.." . . . . , .. I � . I . � . 1. and London, c6pying Bradshaw freely ? It long rest satisfied when the lot of Jilts owner " Did,rod know her too ?" asked Hope. I . . . . I - . . . . - . � � - woul,i &now r all purposes, &Ud give -YOU in poverty and obscurity ? There, that is " We , I have seen her, years ago, when I . . - I . . I � I . . very I i ttle t r )u ble. " . enough. I m ill not hear excuses or pleading she was in short frocks with a pigtail. . .- . - � . . " Dear M a. :-mvilla, what an idea I Now for my son. If I thought Mr. Rawson Then sho was in England for som,� time, . . . . . . ' . I want you to do me a favor. Lot� Miss suggested such interference, 'r would beg but Hilton di(i not consider it.prudent to . . . . . . I . Desmond me with ins to the Opera you to leave me at once." I cross the Channel. Anyhow, Hugh if ' � '. - ' - Com us th a evening. rhey give I La petit " Which I can do to -morrow, if you most anxious about hia-precions wife, and � . -� . - I - i . . Duc.ig!'I My ather has instituted a headache ,wish," said Hope, her pale cheeii flushing fears she may get into trouble during him - � � - . _ . . . and I raLlie want a chaperon. it will not quickly, though she spoko with a pleasant absence. I am thinking of running dowl! - - - . . . I . - I - ­ . . -be very lat'. f) * . smile. to Nice to look her up. She --is there still,,, � .. -. -1 I . . 11 Miss I amond is perfectly free to do as Mrx. 'Saville laughed. , "You know I isn't she?" /. %1. . ,-. ­ . . I ­ . ;ehe4tkea. " . ' should not like you to leave ine," she said, ."-,I think -that in, Mr. Rawsofi thinks . - � . I If you can find any other ohiperon I more genially than Hope once thought she she has left. You had better ask hini" - . . . - ,I � I � - . - am quite eady to stay at home,,, isaid- 'could ever speak. "Nor need You do so, if 11 I will," with somv significance. 1, May' . - r, 11 - I S .. . Hope,amiii g. you will avoid vexed questions. " Hope bent I call upon her imoerious! Highness, do .. ­. , . ' 2 .. I �: . 1. ,. 11 Now, do not be disagreeable. I *&at her head. "Tell me,"resumed Mrs. ,saville, you think?" . . - -1 - . . - . - u ttJ . "if you did leave kno what should you do?" is ' ., 1. . . yo 0 col a with me." ' I can. hardly teIL- You might leave a i* U to co t) . Hope did not answer, and after some "I am; not allsolu tely without resources, card. I am inclined be think that she . . .. . . . further p ur-parlers it was arranged that returned:Hope, "and I should tr� to find would be pleased by 'your kind effort to -. . . . ' . I . ' , � I Mists Dac -a should call for her favorite Pupils or some similar employment1to this." further her son's interest." . � . . � �. . - - .. . . - 00111fi-Ift"W that, eventug an 11 But you prefer staying where �ou are f' " That. is a little encouraging. Hugh . � . 1. . . � . - theatre. 11 Yes, very, very much." -1 ham -always been a, fatorive of mine. He if . . - I I I liav ) a hu ndred and cine things to sa' " There is a tone of sincerity I in your a fine follow, and I do not think he will - .. . . . Y - �'. I . - . too you." hispered Miss Dacre when Hope words. Pray read to me for a while, and revenge �imself on the poor girl- who -in -. . . . .. I . Deemond escorted her to the stair af ter ohs let us have no more ag-tations." , theinnocent cause 'oi his misfortunes. .. . . . .. . . . � ' had take leave of Mrs. 8aville. "The This iong-wished-fir opening ippeared Gad ! aniiveet charming womaa in worth . ... - . 1. - - . . . - . sam in same ky tarious fate still dogs me.� I do to Hope to have done very little good. Nhe paying dear for I"-& sentiment which- . I . . . not k6o what spell binds George Lumley wrote an account of it to Mr. Rawson. seemed to touch his hearer, for she gave � . . . - � ,1 . - to sileno I am so sor for Indeed, bar correspondence with -the kaw- him a soft, lingering, W&rf,ul glance, which, '--* . -., - � 0 ought was son family was very constapt. Every week I . - I himl I r ther imagined he t 7 " had I been some twent years younger,'# - L i . �, ­ I going W )resdeu last winter -o -heaven only a thick letter went to Mize Rawson, and thought the old boy,. " Tithould have felt I ­ 1. � . . -.-. . . . . . knows why. You will be ready at seven- every week came a punctual reply. Some- inclined to repay with & kiss." . - - . . - - I thirty, % il lyou not ?" . . times these letters sent flops to her daily Meantime, Miss Dears's bright beady ", - - - . .. . . . . -1" Yes, certainly." .- . . . �. -. Lanka with a soft, happy amoo on bar lips : eyes danced in her head with delight as . . .., I.... . . � When Rope returned to Mrs. Saville she sometimes her quick -falling Learn bedowed she chattered volubly to Lumley, whose -.. ­ �� - . ­. .1 . . - found th Lt lady'; tisaid removing her out- the paper as she read. But, through smiles loco grow rather sulky " he listepecit . . ... door garb and arranging her mistress on and Learn, @he never failed in her duty to a roely (feigning to reply. Here a wel- I : � - -. .- . the soft, an if for & siesta. ; her employer who grow more and more Tme inWrruption came in the shape of one - .. '- I . . . - - : . . . .. - 11 I w)uId have saved you from- this dependent on her daughterly care and of the English afts.ches, for whom Luml .. I I ey . - .. I I . . I inflietion if I could," she said, presently,"- attention. . immediately vacated his "at ; and' as .- - - . a . ., I . - . when If( pe thought she was going tooleep, Mrs. Saville had invited some friends Lord Evertou wished W say a word W one :'L ' . - . I " but p( iiteose, as well as noblesse oblige . i who were passing through Paris to dipe of th - - - I . I - 9 sinfers, he -departed behind the' . -1 .. Mary Do -cre was always foolish; she is now , with her that day, so HOPS felt no cOm- scenes an Lumley slipped into his place. ' - . - � . . - . abooluteyidioLic. I am not surprised that punotion about leaving her alone, though " My uncle was fortunate in "curing , . - . ... .� . . ­ 1, Hugh hit d no patience with her ; H ugh was she was by no means anxious to accompany your devoted attention, Miss Desmoud." . . . ..-. . - .1. I 1. . I . : always I atinctive. He to like me in many M iss Oacre, who constan t confide, ,6ut i 11 Yes, he always interests me." . .1 . - I � . . things. " I Lumley made her feel uncomfortable ; for . - . . - I - - I-!. I I . (TO RX OONTINURD.) - ' . - . -- - - .. � I.', I � . . i . - . I . - - .-; Hope lituned with nervous. attention, during ittis visit to Dresden she hod per. . . i ­ . .-. �. I � arowing alternately rod ani wnite. Never ceived what was the real attraction which " . !, . . i . .. ' ' � . � 1 L ' ", , - ­ ' ' : I L btfore had Mrs. Saville named her offending brought him there, and she had a "use of � .. � THE CANCER CURL ,., �- :. -. . . I , son, and Ho feared to uttoer a word that uilt towards Miss D"re which oppressed r - .. . . * might offencror divert the current of hot ter. , . 0 . ­ , i- , � - . . ."L, . : . j'.. . Paris Pbyollellans Rettleent A"Mit 9beVenges . .1 thoughtA. 61 However, she will-begoing away won, to I . ... . � . "I arnalways doomed to disappoint I Which Have noon -o'necessful;y rr"S_ _ ,' L I , Z I .- . 1-1 06 t, w was hor reflection as she dressed, alw . sys in ed. ; � . . . . 1. .- . - . ,." she went on as it a airing outhpr thought� black. but not now in such mourning,- - - . -- tiI - ' ' � Titers is Iiiellexr, he will be a dilettante black lace over black satin, her snowy neck A despatch from Paris "ye:-Af telp hy.d, . ., - . * * ,! . �. and a nobody all the (lays of his life. I and arms showing turough .their trans- roph obia, croup ; after croup, orysipelea and - ­ - .1 - - - never wasted any anticipation# on him. parentL covering, and a jet comb shining puerperal fever, after orysipel", " � . . . . . .L. �11 BuLflulhmightbas thing -a ats,tegmang among the abundant coils of bar rich, dark. . .. � .. . a leads - of men. 01 would have done chestnut hair. I has had in its turn to submit to the �"Jt Of I - -. - L - Anything to push his fortunes. All my I am so - glad you could come ?- cried the Past,sur method. ; . - . ` . , - � . hopes, a I my Ambitions. centered in him - -Mi" Dacre, when she got'ioto the carriage. At the last sitting of the A caderntie. des -- - ' - . , 0 . , ' Lod you inow-you must have heard -how "I oan.not 90 Quite by myself, and there in Science? Drs. Reclue and Terrier announo6dr""' V - , , he ropw4 me. . no one else in 'Paris I cars to have. Do you . I : . - - id Yes, I have board," returned Hopqg. in. know, my father *aye -he thinks he saw the discovery of an Luti-canoor serum, by- ,- .. I . � - . .. - such Lrimulous scoonts that Mrs. Saville George Lumley on the . Boulevards this means of which two 0"'" of oanoor hav, . :.. . - � looked u ), " it surprised and touched by d.�orning- " been, if not ou,red, at Is"& so remarkably , ' ' ' I - 1: - her kee i sympathy. "Indeed I Well, wi have non nothing modifiatd " to furnish ground for believing � L ... . *#,& &"a" very of him. - . . arual. " I . . . . . 411 &at is I U-ia. To be forgotten, thrown The house was crowded with a brilliant that a remedy for cii,noter and canoterous - . I � . . I audience. The music was light and spark. tumors has finally been brought to right, . � . I I . ov r f th sake of wpretty'taoe, a whim ling. Many glasses were turned to ithe box . . . . . Of 7"Sloilo. eafter years of dsyoLion I It if , Dr. Reelus remcved a on,nosrous tumoll .'. . , . � intulorl,]: ; it is not to be forgiven. An occupied by the two distinguished . . - - I English women. Hope Desmond h-loolking FOb- 9 from 6 log of one of him patients . - - - unsuital wife is a millstone round a man's ad had . . - . Desk 11 drag him io irrdition ; but a budaet from her faithful friend Min Raw- The tumor was crushed and mixed witi . I � - . - . - , son that evening. and something in the- water,the fluid %has obtained being filtiored -�* � . . I I-l=*1h4t.7'0nishment to m. He w . - L . � ill ,�,Ontsnts had sent her forth with a bright throu . . tire of her, and he will ourse the day he .gb cloth and afterwar& injectied Into - . 4 ever saw her, and sairificted his mother and color and a smilin tam Even Min Do"*, three animals -a donkey onti two dog& . . - career- everyLhing-to a passing fancy. "If-&baorbed as le usually was thought The injection had no appreciable affecit on -.- - I , . - L 11 It was a terrible mia"o.­a-" She "'How handsome Hope in looking r, , the anitnalol,, whr,m blood %as drawn off at m . . . . . - . stopped suddenly. That young lady, who bad been swooping. intervals of fire, "van d fifteen days tha . - ' " I . . I the house with bar opera-glau, suddenly the "rum might be an i . . , "Are you ill?" You look white and extmiated. .: . . . - . . faint I" exolaimed Mm Saville, roused to started, and tzolaimed, "Why, there is On Mairoh 12 doses *of three quble can.. � - . . . . . . George Lumlov, in the baleen opposite I timetres of "rum we injected,' . attenti a by the sudden osisaftlon of her He is with . around a - . - I - ;.- - voice. � Lord Rverton. Is 4 not extra- Ifir tro'l the ribs of a woman . I : 1# On - t � ordinary 1 --as soon as I oomet to parig he - thX =; adhering . - . L y a 'little giddy and daind; the going the,ordinary t"Atment.. -- I � - sun, wal so strong tAoo-dayp" returned Hope, app"M �Sta I be agents as ; they an oam. for ftinicer. One tumor had previously - -_ -� :. . I . - steadying her voice bys, strong offort, "I I over. I L't know how itist, busl been removed from the G&MOLWOM&R. . -. . . .- : . - . - . 11 felt fait t when we were driving round tht fel I should meot him bore. " . whose ease was eonsiderod hopelon by the ­ .. . , . � � lakes. Bak dear h1re. Saville, may I say , In a few minutes the door of the box majority of the surgeon&. The injoations .­." .. . L opened .. ... . that gr later blame attaches to the girl who LO 94mit Lord 9"rtogn and his of agerum were continued during forty days, . . Til . - I young nephew. �. Z... allows( your son to staorifloo hinuielf for ,.Well L On the twelfth day the " Of! the tumor. I . L, I . , .Pat , M ism Dacre, this to an :ted began to dimiui* the decrease'oontinuing � .1 . . . tier, than to him. an" I. I 'No loubt she is a designing minx. But pleasure", said the Allant old Paw. "I Until 00 trace of it remained, save a alight . .1 , I- -- . I � . mot Castleton a couple, of hours ago, an4 Bunkm sear. At the gem* time the pat. - � me you we" comlDg * . ' . I 1. , . she wi i find that Ph* reckoned without her he told bers, to-sigbt. isat's general condition greatly improved . .. . . host v hen she caught my "in, .� - : Existence Thea this young soaosgrao balled at my and she became sensibly stouter. : . . .. . . . as the wife of a poor naval officer i I ,� . . I Is not otyry sUJ ,justriomt, and w . . I . . quita, a bed of ro@4." - 9 agmed 66 look The eftoond wiss, visa oanow of the stom. . �L '-1 JL I .. 44 Ani I suppose she proves a devoted wife, you up. ' . r fleh- Similar treatment was adopted with . . I ., ., . . . ­ pruden� ful, self-denying, would you I'll saw Richard in town the day before the SMs, resullt. Thoi doses injected wolv r I I'll. - , . I care . - �. . . L notin i tine forgive her, and pardon him' far yesterday," said Captain Lumley sis he luger, however, and ,the improvement , '. . I . . - . his mio ortune in falling a Tiounit too -her shook hands with Miss DwmandL it, He more rapid. - . I v, .. . . - I dealgn 1, told me you were in Paris ;- snd-here I -Experiments are still goi g on, but t , � - I . . ? of 1. . u he - - " . . - . L soy suppogoe what is highly improbable; 4=4 Utmost reticenote was observed with repM . -.:-.11 . . .. b t v if this woman prove a, gem of th "'it Is the best time for Paris, evefrythia to thek r" . looks so bright sad gayl to she returned witf reserved f ults' all Announoemente bellng - ', . I L - . - fl : a,, a, at' ter, that Willi do nothing towaIrl: some slight embarrammouL 0 or the Academie4es Soisnoss. - -, ,,, . " . - ppshin my son in his oamr. All must forent from Dresdom" #'P%ther dif- The small quantity of serum obtainabI is ­ ' ' - . L. � I I come f orn him ; and a wife endowed with - I . the greatest obstaole DrL Roeolud and Ter- . I - _: . -" - . .. oney or interest, or both, ass do so much "I hope Lbers way be a I ahangs from the rier have to Gontand vigainst, AL 0harles - - ­- . I . . fIr a Maddening sat aU this in, what Dresden two," he rePlied.with some signi. Richel" of the Faoult� do Medicine, it -said - 1� . - ' ... I I a . �nbit ra me, most is my sou'soontemptuou's floanos, Then -he turned to great Miss to have originated the idea of appi ' . . . I , I * - .. . , 4isreg I of am To marry.without a word Daure with gregat4ordiality,and while they "rulo testatment to cancer OMOS. ying the .1 , �'... - - � . � ,W. . I � . � . no , an attiompt to win my oonvent talked with much ani -44-- I '.. ". - _: . - . . I . . r .. 1. . IM .�F­ Lord Riverboat - " - ,; L'; .' -f'-- I .: . . I �as, insult. L addressed Min Deantou& . I .: - - . L .... - � " . - � . -- . ­ It . . �LIL .1 . .. �'- ­., . X�Bv 1, Mm SaTifl% if I may venture to "Delight" to a" you I Sogiggid you hsl I Chano -of Dist �.. I . I - '. �� :- I -- , " ­.- . .1 :.. -1 &k To M6L- L . I.. - f ­. 1. an a sabioat so near your heiart, do not deserted my distinguished sister-in-law. I guests I'll have one of those - tfiodisik� - --. , ` - 4' you not think thas the hopelessness of You vvmind me of Una and tle Lion, in I broiled , to -day, said the King of 4&bwpka. ' L '-'. - ­ - gainin your consent hold him book from might; say the Tiger. The softonin MAY It P161130 Your Royal Highness, van- �; " L": - I " . ' .� - ter�, , : I.. . . maki. the JaU*mpt Ig"' you have exereifed is rAl,as,xinj I .,J power tu d the high chief Moward, the Pr"by . .; I y wiwb ro 1. - ­ , - L ­ - "It should have hold him baek alft from the Pr"M extended in widening oiroles to i"tch is much the latter. - ;.�� _,. -'am . . - - . . � '.. � - L - such tefuldistsbediance, Hoknew he esubraof a fow . mon,$b&n your fsvo You do what I sell Yoliig thundered . , . - woul reak-oo, not break ray heartl- s"" . red mon&r h .tb4 ': .�. I : I . �, . mine not the kind of heart which breaks. #'I W" Oh- I &To boon eating Preab tertsins - I. L ­.. . ..... :,- I 1116111ofted the power you ored It for a w6sk DOW and the -court pry$ioi&a L- - % ... '. - -but harden it with & hardness that pain as, wibb," retur Ho - _ � 'CL ­. ,-Eb - Jaed PG. smilingi, . UW ' ahange of diet. ­ � .., - for him L - . .. I :. . . with a doll indescribable- sohing."' ral was room Wide her. %* W&g . : � " L � ­ � ­ . ­ .1 ­ - ........ "� . , � L I -. I L L., , i;7 . ­.. " . I.. - - . , � . I . : � . - - I , - - . I . 8 1, yes, it was wrong-twibl - who show" bm a degr" of kindl wro .. A10001id ne. to the V1 L :' � .. , . , I - ­ � . - -1. - m . , a. - - always amused with thilt boyish old �' .1 , " J she -ented lior hand on her bosoC . .64 so ­ , - 4.1 . - ­­ .. I � cried Hop! and thorts was 0, ,,,.I o,r "t"9,, Jtentlon which bouohtpd�htfr. y all. �`, . I 191 -�t- 7. "- ­� . 4-: L. p'�*'�'-L-`' . - .. , , I--, � I � ,.I. ,­-� �� , - . 1-11 -�-- in Im r vZZ '"'but you know your son's - "And hov, an oi Wag on I" he � . ) TOMMY -POPS - what's - the differe-r'lift'". :` " .,:.:' . . ,�. I ��; - , . . � 11 .A : I . �� I and just being . , . . I I . . - - � � %. - oon. tilreeim having Spring fever i . .. - " � V � � 0 := " I L a uAtus a (I haveteard all about his unfortu I . � , ­� N h n* 1. a - um-t"k. "I know''lazyl '. . . . . , . - :� .� . . A Min Rawaoa� $1 L . t - - . *-: �-"�'L -1. %to rt arriage fror - I A . 4 -bst Saged failow, Rgawma a . it:-... , .- I . , -- - 91 bZ t 'Ounted.04, you Tomm i Pop-wellig if Youlre an'em- -L � : 7: �", or wi ongly, be loved tbk girl with - §$ "�.-�#Y.Jj� *0 01�" 01,_LM&d ' , ­ " t -..-.- , z I I . - - h L . I :w � - . .Ployer . - . L:'��.r i . gs L� �: ' ' 1. - amll Pt . it a Spring fev,er, and 'i jroulre &A.. , 1. I -&A - - ow _ 1-. , . , I I I . .1 ­ - 1 41"t, siad ship W" si"dorly -I ----I 1A 1. ': � .. ­ .1 ,: I.. � L '.1 f .. . .: ;, r -- I I I . , . . . ­ 2A ,'. 4 . � r .. I . ­ . .1 I .1 I ., � . , I � I L� - 4molove ive - Y. z -1 - - . I ­ I ­ '. .. . .. ­ ��i�. W134 -,;-_ Just Win ins; - I , . .. I I . � I . M U� . *-,�- - ­..", - . , - I . ; - f ­­ , h " �� in 1. � - -, ­ - -� --":­ 4 44,MZ � -F,F , , I � ­ .1 L � , - ' 'i - - .LJ4'.'4,) - -'. 6 .."fF �, .4 , 'K , � . . �&-& -'tj�-J;ej- . ­ , - ,V , . . ­ '�JjjN _ 4 1 ­ , - �ft,�,�h .-.,%. . -t- , , , �� .1 �& : ::-�­! " : r '. i .IA -V 'L .. I . ­ �, ' L, -­ -1 ,V g, I � . ,, , _ ­ L ­T.�% �, _ , -� � 2 1% . � I - - - . r , ; ; - �� - . . ­ -P - ;, .. ;, 1.,4;. .,�, � ­ " -!� �:�tp - F , r � _ I , . . . . . N �'..ft , I �, . _ -. - - - -V I . � -i W' L � . . 1. -. , -, ­ - ; W- I I . I- .3 . -.4, -1,��,�', - -� - � . . . . , , ".. . ., � .L . - Vl� -- �,, ... I - , 6. " . � . - .. I . I - . . I t - � ; . . -., I .. EAMI W11. . .1 - - � . " �L - . . .. - � . , iiX��&, - - . , 4;.�, 1 , �, b , . . - r.4w. , I - - " - --J. . ! "i -- !L� 'm - . , . . -. . .� .� . I i I . - , Ill - . I "I . :. . .;J i . I . �� ,��MM -41",% .. , - ;. � .4 � I .1 - - : - " . ,.:. . I ­ � I I .; ", I ; 1. - -1 n- . . I 1.1�,'N � - � . . . , � A4 -.,..,, � - - , 11. � . 411 X. � i - I . , -- .. - . " , ,�* � . I ­ � - ­. . ,�. . - ,X -, - . , 01, rr . ­. ­% . - f-�' � .- . .. � . . .�. �-4 L . � -1 ­,- 11 1. .,� , , , ; .. �� . - - , 1 F - I I - 1 ! - - - - - 1� � ., I - '. - ' ' � -- .1 . , L" - I I " I I .1 I , , - .. . L.- - - I , � -- . . - ... . . . . . - . . . F .S'•"` �.�i 2X, 't 'a 9 Y �y 'fa 6*fI+,ry 9 Y , 'L._}S 1F tA.TP xd x. +A' � I 71�:wl. f- f ypaaV�*?�fr'1' �"► j �..♦i ��,.�� lase 6ae ve> tntie6 W wi111- atit�w y .� #A �,.R�Y ' j /' 3T, ll a. `Fa, .•.r.����;4-�i��\t" [ •.f `i- i f I S..�' y Y ' v', 4 f _ t I ' f _ l P,�i �k gA#i„N'j! Pl " •'v civ' {"° +fi. .' '1, K z x�" t '. S L l , I r k. .' R l f •set J *. S Benning that the old pasture has i P r t � h` 1¢ r- plc ed, enriched, and sown with a good especially just previous to or during X`f ____ ._ :.. .. - ,. . I QUEER THINGS IN JAPINI MRYT1919G BACKWARD ACCORD. INN TO OUR WAYS - -- it . The Yeo( Is -the IFlrst -tar -6 the .nae . They • Build—Bow and Plane tack- -" `. w;ard—Tbe Vovernmeut Is Liberal and Progressive — Beautiful Ivory and . Wood Carving—lallway Lined with Cherry Trees. € The quaint and novel `scenes inspan grow upon one as he prolongs his stay, writes a correspondent. . " The higher class of Men `haTs. adapted, . to a large extent, our method of dress. - But, with f_ew exceptions, - the women . ; continue the native dreoa,whi?ch is deoideA- ly more becoming. Those that wear oily style of dress are apparently uncomfortable . - and wear it only when receiving foreigners. Even the amen wear W estern suite only when appearing in .public. - # . '. The higher classes usually have two separate though connected houses—one furnished in foreign style wjth chairs 'and tables, the other with no furniture. The former the use but little exce t where y P receiving and entertaining forelgners. Even those educated abroad seem to prefer in home life the old Japanese ways. � , . . • The middle classes of men are gradually adopting Western dress. Some costumes. are ludicrous in the extreme. You often see a coat over a kimors or an' odd -shaped . hat, a cost and bare lege. � ' The climate being warm in I summet the - _ working classes wear.only a breath cloth, - • and in the interior one sees laborers with- ' out a gaiment of any kind. The women are no more• modest thaq, the men. Coining gown from the interior last week` I passed a pool where a score of men, . women and children were bathing together, and to the surprise of - our little party particularly the ladies, the entire -lot sour- . ried out to the roadside.to see 'our lineIoi . jinrikishas pass. To them it was appar- ently but natural to be clad only as nature had provided. BUILD TIIB ROOF FM49%, •,. _ In the winter the Japanese'willnotlwear half as mugh clothing as a foreigner. But then the natural Japanese do everything by contraries, viewed through oto• eyes. i . For instance, the- roof is the first part of the house they build. That is constructed - on the ground and then the house i■ built under it, the roof being raised as the con- struction Roes on. This is done -in the con• _ struction of h ousts with several stories as well as those with one. ' - The Japanese saw and plana tacky aid. All their doors slide ivatead of opening. - Their tailors make the lining of a suit first their books aro pruned backward, end you read from the rear ; flower are gard us in the rear of the house; keys turn to tlgie left instead of the right i vehicles and skis has peas to the left; trains run on the leftihand track, and everything else is contra�Cy to our system, except their modern in�ova- - tions, patterned upon �� estern idem acid - inventions. :- I., Japan is rapidly undergoing a soc.41 and industrial revolution. She has a military system founded upon the beat experience of France and Germany; a nary modelled upon the best French and h nglish teachings. She has made herself dockyards. and built and bought steamers for foreign trade, She has constructed railroads throughout her country, but she uses the little English compartment cars, and as yet has no sleep- ing care, the-,gh they are badly ncRacld. j She has established a cheap and efficient telegraph and postal service and a tele -s phone service ;in her chief cities. �S' reef caro are used in several cities, and in 'Tokio f . -an .lea -sic street railroad is to be con atructea. The -chief cities are lighted with electricity, and, indeed, Japan is beeoinIng l '&.thorough Western country.. I LOOKING FORWARD. , The. ¢overnment ie Liberal and progres. - aive, and what private corporations will not undertake it does. �'4 hile it owns the telegraph lines and many of the railroads, �' all of which are profitable, private corpora- I • tione own .half of the railroads, the tele-' A phones, electric, light Plante and street � railroads. Railroads and street -car lines 1; pay very handsomely; Thry are operated cheaply, and the average Japanese is so daft upon the subject of rising that he will spend hie last cent to travel to a distant l : . town -and walk- back. Tlie beds of the fig: - railroads are sodded - and beautified.. One railroad has 200,000 cherry trees planted Fy along the aides. E There are something like 40,000 pub lio 'U schools in Japan. The buildiage are cQm- .i1, Portable and education is compulsory. `' _ r i; x s -11. I l,,.r:u CA$vINO. �' In ivlry ani w .,o i carving-Jaran is a ead of the rest -of the world ; in lacquer work 11;;, and rn pottery and vases she has no ,rival. '_ The -work of the Japanese artists in paint - 11 ing flowers -and birds is not equalled.. Yet I ' no Japans a artist can paint 'a horse or the �_ 'portrait of foreigner. They can't paint a f'- horse bees se they have uo horses that,we ' would call horses. They are runty, rough• '_- looking, k otty brutes. Japan s not adopting. the Christian �% religion-, there are thousands of Christlian missionari s, but they are said to I be a^cnmplis ing little. There is no Sun ay in Japan, s with us. It -is like all other nays. Sto ea are open, business goes o as usual, he Japanese, however, have many. da a of rest or recreation. For instance, l st Sunday was a day on wh. h l the births f male children in Japan sur ng V the preceding year is celebrated. In front of ev ry. esidence in which a boy baby was bowl was a long ba.liboo pole, from which nu lberless'paper fish floated in 6e breeze, hese fish had a wire holding the mouth op n; the wind blew through them and they appeared pretty and natu�al.. ` ' . The fish a e presents from friends, and the 1 number h aging to a pole indicates ,the'' popularit of the family. They represent carp, whi h are`said to swim up waterfalls, - and thus are symbols •of the succsee the .� boy i� h14 to make in his future str g- I t t • ... '. e 1 , ' .:: aJ r.. .• } i 'Y - .: i" Iia., .�.. z: v y 'u f - J ,x a xr. d.�' x c' r ✓< s r C 1� 4 5 k P P F { ! - 3 } L JV J ! Q t j .p H 't ii. t y S t"' Y.. Ls' -.-t C -. r y �` '.t -, - 'F' � . r:" }. k=. � f` �p .. j �• . �f f. % r § 3 � W< y glee to the world. 4*1 babies don't avant in Japan. The birth of one is a .misfortune in tike family. . y IIIfEAPI►Y oIRLtl.=,' :` , �i _h , Th. poor girls have a hard ionic of it Ht Japan. If her parents are poor 'Bike is sometimes soli fora term of years, or s marriage is arranged at an early age, Shr, has no word in choosing her fate. If a husband grows tired of his wife she is easily divorced. W -hen it is known that two of the seven grounds upon which a husband can divorce Lie wife are disobedi- ence and talking too much it is unneoe►s. Bary to mention the others.- Among the lower classes divorces are very common, and it ►s ■o common for a man to have several alleged wives. Twelve and' fifteen children in a family is not unusual. The mother takes charge of the youngest infant, Which she straps upon her back going about her duties. The other babies are strapped on the baoks of the older children, who run about the streets with them, It is not unusual to see a child of four or five years old with an infant upon its back. -They play about the streets in this way. At the hotels few of the waiters Wrider- stand Euglish. In consequence the menus are printed in English, with numbers for each dish in English and Japanese ohsrao- tere. You call the number in Japanese or point to the Japanese character opposite the dish in ordering. Like everything else in Japan, the theatres are constructed backward. The , stage is at the entrance and there is a barn• boo of rtain between it and the street. Between the audience and the stage is nothing. The curtain in thq .rear of the stage and on the street is raised at the commencement of the performance and -kept up for a time in order ' to catch the populace. They are permitted to see enough of the performance to become in- terested• Then the curtain is dropped and many are induced to spend a few sen for admission.. . - - ' 1'.PILGRIMS TO SPREAD A- PEST. T1tsAaands of (stricken Nett at rieeca, /Where Cholera Hazes. Ona hundred thousand pilgrims ars now assembled. in the City of M-coa, and as cholera has appeared among them they threaten the health of the world. In ,% very short time these cholera-infooted pilgrims will return to their respective countries to implant the seeds of a 'direful pl� gue among the nations of the earth.' jThe Mohammedan pilgrimage t0 Mecca is a unique custom in the religious history of, the world. Notwithstanding the in, roads of civilization upon the Orient, 100,- 000 human beiuga still undergo the greatest privations in order to kiss the famous black e one which forms part of the sharp angle o�f the Meccan Temple. Tho ' benepts of ' tihe pilgrimage pro gv%&t, for the anis of rr 1 I , I -i I: •i - , I i . ~�� r J 1 / 1 ��� I , 1 �1 - .j . - i , -I �' i7 i .e.e►I �, i. . I1 i . . ^ � %, 1 e \ i ', i1 e I - �J I %I I -1 _ l:"� �1.. _ y' red •--.. / f . E •.- , I; I- ':' _ T ; TAE 3MBd0A PIUM1111. .1 very pilgrim, no matter how dant theyy ay have been, are forgiven by the AI- ighty, and the supplications of the pilgrim in behalf of others arc accepted by tics. ooh was 'the teaching of the YrophoL Ar- soon as the pilgrim reaches the last tage near the sacred city he makes two rostrations in prayer, and divests himself f hie worldly raiments. Then he assumes he pilgrim's sacred robe and sets hie heart n Mecoa. 'The Meccan pilgrimage was a oompromise ith. Arabian idolatry, and no Moslem riter has ever y_et attempted to give a piritual explanation of its oeremonies. It e one of the most curious circumstanoes in n the history of religion that the superati= ions and silly oustom of Meocan pilgrimage hould be graf ted to a religion which is oonoclastic in its practices. The spectacle fr the Mqslem world bowing in the- one irection of a black stone while it worshipps he .one true Qod stamps the religion of file rophet of Arabia'as one of compromise. r _ A�Mean Fellow. Mr. Binks—I met a woman to -da' y that thought a good deal of once. Mrs. Bink.—Oh, you did ? - • Yes. I used to do my very beat to please er. j Humph 1:': : ,:'_ j I did overything I could..0 win her af- action. .. My goodness 1, .. + , r And at last I succeeded. 1 Who She granted all that I asked, and by ao doing made me the -happiest man alive. �Iereiful— I asked her 'to come right np to the house with me to-di%y, but. she had .some shopping to-do, and c.Iannot. get here until supper time. Mr. Bink., I am going right home to my mother.. . ,8he isn't at home, my dear. It was your mother, shat -I met. She gave me you. I 4 f.N . 1 S, I �� i - , 1,41 , '1' -I 3 (: 4 Ft 1 vl 1 F b. ( y _1 i . 1 •.h 4 11.w vt� f I ;l i I. n p)/ I < II - bF_ j ar 4 r h ^� y 'i 6 h D 4• i i $' h } _�.. G r..4- -. � - Yi �s A• i i nC- S ANY `r ':( + Y 9 ti �}��� #�3p f< s_ Q I i IWC j J R x4 >'f T i - •'Me , �- iJ.... y , N .Jf ` . A.,: isy, z'.. 31 1. Z Asn, . r >r a" ti , v .s� -ti� ., € -1. ,fir_. r z. , <, ti `�(f� ..dy 9 k'tl` p [ d y.. ilp �fi, G i✓. t x t +�. lF .5 Y g...-- _ •... ',. as _,., . •.c "ki}-.- r„r - r rr ` 'L�". f - r x c. i 7 '• a w.- ": r e s s t a � . ' {{ 3` !s," x • L - . C} '. c t p F {. 4 .T . k r 3 ,. d s sk . ` v:` �.. R a` i�it)[.JSHt�L.L. - E t , Pstabe9 sed Egli . kY1 �4 'i Mrs. Patera, eats me if I an i io- , __; , , :I t uisitdve. but why gave rm owse pieces et I Q; oth spread out there in the sun? 'telae; •_� I sok like new cloth," remarked Mrs. Frloe., , coking ant of the window on the lfttle , , de rah. r r=a r ' f Po "They arej ndeed." `was Mea. Pe�ersr' : . s 'j ughing rejoinder. "They are pieces of i `=_ ?'.A . ' •,, - y boy's pants for -patches. The garment ' u ,.`- _, ',.` •- as faded somewhat, and not to make the` 41 # art { , ntrast too startling, ;and subject him to ":spa � ,,, 3 •r _ N unkind remarks, I am trying to obtain tbi ",.,=t:' I. me shade on the new piema as we res on ' v, 1 -` � , f e old." � rc : ;. �� ' _. "That - -i an -idea- I`.-bave� levee . ;` , - :1 ought at," sMil Mrs. Price. "It wenid ,-' N _ s a good plan when puttipg new sleeves , , 14 4 K gingham or calico dresses, wouldn't it I" t�� 3?„ " Yes; you would probably have to walla .fid � _a e material in that case." ' ' Yr . c : "I have seen much. discussion of dish. ' - ashere decently," remarked Mrs. Potems. ; ` rc g �.: F z ,F Vf k> i' While visiting a friend I found she had J, , 1 " - Boarded tier dishpan and ones not exactly, - { � .r,- �' dishwasher, but certainly a very orginal _ ; . - - ` a ; "I should like to hear about it," said - u� `=� -1 re. Prioe," in an interested tone. .� "She uses a fifty pound lard can, whiea ' ` `4 e obtained from a store. - Pile the plates . ui -:- i eatly at the bottom, pack the saucers :. Y r ound them, then the cups and the lasses 4 b est. She as, a they will not crack 5 WA `' their sides. She washes the silver and .''I- i I hives separately, as they are apt to be - .:. ' 4�, i retched. Cut a light shaving of seep . m to the can and pour two kettles of hot ! ` . �l ester over the dishes. Set the can on a ooden chair close to the table. Then after few moves of a long handled dish nap, ` r µ e dishes were piled on the table to drain, - c `�_ 1 d I must say they.looked very nicer, amid �-. a very short time a large pile was washed. < 1-. d wiped." "That sounds very easy," sighed Mrs. : r r;. 4 ice. "I hope it would prove eo in pros•:. oe." ;; "Suppose you try it and see," was her -, end a suggestion. '' •11 have been experimenting with boiling i i ge," Mrs. Price remarked, after a pause. a'r "And what is the result ?" inquired her' sCaner. '+ , " I have decided that the most perfect " . "� ay ie to lay the eggs in the hot saaoepwn d cover with boiling water. Let them {;, main where the water will keep.hot, but . - - - ot boiling, for ten minutes." ' S' I have a new method, too, which I - : - ave both seen and tried myself. Break ,, :. - ur or five eggs, keeping the yolks whole - - d separate. Beat the whites to a stiff oth and pile on an earthen plate, which • • ill not injure. Drop the yolks at regular servals into t"he whites. Set in a moder. e over. until the whites are brown, when - ,,; � e yolks will be cooked just right for . oat people: , P_ little watching will Are- nt their getting too hard." . " I think that must be a pretty dish," as Mrs. price's comment. �, i. " That to one of its advantages," was the ,i ower. - - ,.> _ . . 'ti,F11es Hate Lavender.. "I never r.se window'soreeas," said a wise r M ; usekeeper the other .day, "because I is ve a fancy that theylehtat out. all the air . hot weather, and, besideii, they serve to . ep the flies in the house equally As well ' ' - ou t, f, . "But I never sea a flp in your house;" ° `� ' id her friend. Huw do you .manage its ? - .. ` _ r. my part, I must confess that screens no screene,my summer means to me one - . nes battle with the tittle pests." - . "My remedy is a simple .one," said the . od housekeeper, "and I learned it years . o frgm my grandmother, when I used to:.' Bind watch her putting bunches of lav- - , der flowers around to veep the Elise away. y method is simpler. I buy b cense' ' ' ;Y• -� Orth Jal;Ail of;lavender at the drug store. ; d mix it with the eame.quantity of water. hon I put it in a common glass atomizer d spray it around the rooms wherever - . es are apt to cougregate, especially in the - ning•room. where Isprinkle it plentifully er the table linen. The odor ie especially .. eaareeable to fliers, and they will never - . afore in the neighborhood, though to '' '; oat people it has a peculiarly fre.jh and _ ' atefu! smell." M - How Fruits Are Served: - :. _ - . Oranges are cut in half and eaten with an "' ange spoon. The peel serves as a cup.. , Pineapples are peeled, cut in very thio ces, the core out out, and served with gay . .. - � - Bane�nse are slightly opened at one encs- , d served on individual fruit plates. Irk Berries are usually put in a large berry , .. • wl -anti served in individual dishes at ble. Grapes are placed on a large fruit dish -- th green leaves around edge. s Often several kinds of fruit are placed is e large fruit dish on the table, at:d each • ", soon provided with an individual fruit: I oto. " ., Oranges eaten in the. natural state, or - th the pulp prepared and simply sprin- ed wive sugar, are ao delicious and - `? aithful that it seems almost unnecessary - x i ` suggest other' wikys in which they may. - �. utilized. v} - � `° - �.L - - Reeipes. ; _, - s Lettuce Salad.—Carefully• •'Vvash and,. ick ;�` ace in• the salad dish sufficient lettuce [ r dinner..: Slice four hard boiled eggs ` er the top. Then take a cup'of rich, sour .,r,`�: .' earn, half cup of vinegar, ,three table `fa pons of sugar, one teaspoonful of salt 5 is well and pour over the lettuce. Strawberry Trifle.—Put a quart of straw ' �-= tries in a fruit dish, eprtnkle with sugar S nd . powdered cracker. - Then -make a . ' ustard of tae and one-half piute-of ,nick,. '' \': three eggs, half cup of sugar and a spaott " x ;: 1 of corn starch. Pour over the berries .L ` r= aiding hoi. When cold cover with whip. ' g-;, ,, „ ped oream and ser. r x �, 8 4 KL 1 { } Y. . C -_ a.3 } 3 d Y. i .. - _ _ .. !i '' . I ` t �r '4 1 Y °/ ^ v d, u. `' t J th-- � . tE•' , 1 : + 2 a . J' 31t `�- x i. t- r - "i'� - - 1 .r' 3� 1% pv_g - . '' ' .. n �"► j �..♦i ��,.�� lase 6ae ve> tntie6 W wi111- atit�w L✓ V j haudiing MA sad Bream--tho sight "in• ` perature is one of the essentials. Bob nob . • Care of Worn-out ra&turefl. .only has the degree of hest very much to Benning that the old pasture has i do with results, bat madden changes have peculiar effects and should be avoided, plc ed, enriched, and sown with a good especially just previous to or during q m► Lure of grass seed that has grown well, manipulation. of the grass should be out in bloom for hay. , : ' "'�""" Na urs seems to throw all her energies into . > . Sklm ]milk for Pigs - 1 the perfection of her seed, the stem being �' reader having naked the Breededs d the largely composed of indi estible wood g y Glazette asto_.whether he could afford to pay fib r of little feeding value to..the stook, 20 cents per l0U for skim-mllk to feed pigs, Ia wh le the roots are weakened to the same with hogs selling at four mind one half ciente 1° ez nt as the new seed is perfected. There• per 100 live weight, Prof. W. ,L Henry h fo , to out when the sap is in the stem if answers as follows : � 00 to sin a more nutritious food and to leave if As a bare proposition with no contio� a rot in full vigor of growth. When hay. gencies I would say yea, For young pigs ea in is over, the aftergrowth should begrazed the feeder can find nothing equal to skim. It th wi h fattening stock or working horses, milk.' Riven them a start that nothing D not let miloh come or young -stook Into else can. For such, feed three pounds of skim -milk to one of corn meal. A mixture y th su h pasture the first, season, because is th y require food for bone of half corn steal and half shorts is perhaps be so much milk, more satisfactory from a practical stand. in an muscle, their manure is poor. Keep point, though not theoretically. I think sh ep off, for they would tear up many of shorts are lose harsh in the young pig's th th young grave planta, At the expiration stomach. Certainly pigs fed shorts and of a5oat 10 days' grazing take the stock milk do wonderfully well, while theoretic- s , and run ever the field with chain bar• ally Born meal ie the , complement of the w ro a to distribute droppings and prevent milk.. As the pigs grow older, unless here 4, th growth of patches of the stronger grass- is milk in abundance, reduce the milk di es In three or four days the stook can be gradually. p t back. In October or early November ' . .. a PI gi e a good dressing of dung, say 12 loads the acre, spread and leave to the follow- ONE VOYAGE AROUND CAPE HORN -in spring. A daily ration of ohopped straw 6 s., wheat bran 1 lb. and cottonseed meal gasaples er the Weather that May 'be M 2 be., will help both stock and land. very Found In that Locality. sh nsiderably, and without it most pastures The British ship 9p�ke, which left Ant - n w 11 certainly deteriorate, warp 334 days ago for Sari Franaisoo, ended ar Second year. —In spring ohaln-harrow, her voyage on Saturday,and from the reports on t en roll well, and when ready to graze put of bar crew il6 w'as one of the most unlucky k o the stook. See that the droppings are r gularly spread. Should any rough tufts voyages around Cape Horn that have been lm in a pear atter a couple of weeks' grazing, undertaken for many months. The vessel w h ve them mown down with a hand soythe, sailed on June 16, 1.894, and all went well a, t s cuttings carted off' and given to the until Aug. 22,. when the vessel was almost a s ok in the barn, and give to these places o ly a dressing of salt or caustic lithe, the within sight of Cape Horn . On that day th 1 tter for preference, in a finely powdered a ate that had been blowin atl the re- g g P as in c °dition. This simple management to• coding day incressod to ahurricane. Several min ther with&ow seeding of poor spots will of the lighter sails were blown to ribbons, y on produce an excellent pasture, and orsover wi41 keep it in a good heart and and the first mate, J. $rurott, went aloft i orease its value yearly. This is the with the men to assist. in replacing them. tPir ethod I have adopted after many years' While he was In- the tore -rigging the ship fri e nerienoe and study in old ltngland,where gave a lurch as -a great wave broke on deck, e take far better care of pasture than you o in Amerioa.—Prof. Albert Ar Jager, and about the same instant a dark bod was y eg ngland. seen to fall from the yard of the foremast li " _ ___ through the flying spray ,and ■ink into the sea. It was the first mate who went over- '•'- . Methods in Dalryii,s. ' board and was never seen again. It vas im- min A few weeks ago the British Hairy possible to:make any attempt Co save the re drowning man. A seaman named Denerioe rrmers' Association visited Switzerland on was badly buised by being knocked about n voyage of investigation. They found a the dock, and several others were laid up h seat many things of value in dairying from bruises received the same wa The fo hich they highly. rommendee and noticed nb:t day the.gals moderated someeer, at, but an , he great ware, skill and neatness mani- . A RtwY CROSS- BRA Ir sted by the people in the manufacture of wwt running and the ship labored heavily. airy products. ' Under the most progres- The relieving tackles on the tiller were in at ive methods the $wiz# farmers have not carried away and the next wave that broke on the deck washed away the mid- th nly added to the value of their products ship steering gear. Some new- sails were - re ithin the past ten years but greatly set, but they were blown away again, and vanced the productive capacities of the the vessel rolled and pitched at the meroy oil. Dr. Gerber of Zurich, has been a of the storm, Then came a week of mod. W rominent factor in •there advanced orate weather and'advantage was taken of an etho is, and for many .modern appliances it to make repairs. be dairymen of that country are indebted Ot Sept. 7, the vessel passed Cape Horn, him. With, so progressive a people it and five days later, t.fter weathering a s no wonder that we find the following succession of gales, another hurricane was acts: In Canton Zurich two-thirds of the enoounwred. The first blast of the storm hu arm business is devoted to dairying and it threw the ship on her beam ends and aye a net return of 4 per cant, on the value the sea made a complete breach over the hay t the land and A per vent. on the improve• hall, w&shing the deck clear. The rush of in outs. Hay yields two or three tons per the tremeindous body of water over the ke oro and sells at =12 per ton is ordinrry decks worked havoc among the rigging. easons, whereas a decade back it war lt! and the insets swayed and tottered as as o =25. Milk hu held steadier in price, though atx+ut to tall. Utte of the sermon holurioh farmers receiving an average of Hamad J Auger wan assisting in furling aa' � 1.27 per cwt. for mllk Bald- in 1891 to the mizzen topsail when the crash Dame FO utter sad cheese factories, against =1.16 on the deck. The shook was telt so' wenty years ago, and for tnis whole period strongly aloft that he way shaken tram pie or he price has averageu $1.18. The pasture Perch and fell into the sea. He made a to nd mo+wing is better now than then and struggle to swim after the vessel, but telds larger crops, so that dairying is nothing csould be done to Gave -him and he go tore profitable in Zurich than in former was drowned. He etas- only 20 years of ag ears. The farmers get about 3 cents per age and a native of France. For nearly sit c uart for milk Bold to peddlers, who retail ton days the hurricane continued without .art i at 4 and b cents, making about iia per intermission, and during that time the M ant. vessel drifted back nearly to the Cape w . — again. all - • Clover -stair Land. i'hen flame• A day of fair weather, but .r the next morning saw the storm in 411 its an It Inas been notice.i that it G almost fury again. The seas once more were fir i possible to grow red clover year after WASHING ovaR TUN VF88ZL, di ear upon ordinary farm soil. Old field and one wave larger than the rest swept. di di f clover become thin and yield little, and over the bulwarks, smasUng in the door of the forecastle and flooding the quarters of re then said to be clover-siok. Experiments the men. As it went aft it took off the m ave shown that when land is in this skylight of the cabin, filling the rooms of gr edition none 'of the Waal mpriuree or the othoers with water and damaging a ertilizers oan be relied upon to secure a quantity of provisions in the storerooms. Many mace sails were blown away, and the sop of clover, and the only means .of in- men of the crew were. so knook:ed about' by wring a good stand and yield is to allow the- storm and rolling of the ship that only" ome years to elapse before egpeating the nine were fit for duty by the time the storm► or rop on the same nd: The general result subaidedf The moderate weather was only f the trials on field soil wan that neither for a few days, when it seemed that the. sli ganio matter- rich in carbon as well as storm tied gathered all its forces for a final Ager elements, nor ammonium salts, nor effort to wreck the vessel. All of Sept. 27 au itrate of soda,. nor mixed complete fertil• the hurricane was more severe than any ,of were, availed to restore the full clover- the previous days, and the seas rose almost an fielding capabilities of the soil. however, litre mountains. During the height of the here some of these were applied in large .tempest the midship wheel rudder chain bo uantity, and at considerable dapths, the parted. At the same time the relieving to asalte were bett:sr than where they wore tacklee parted again, and the rudder* was „ used iii. only moderate quantities and almost useless. Nothing could be done to mai pplied only on the surface. On a rich steer the vessel while the storm lasted,and garden soil, however, red clover has grown in that time she got ;broadside to the seas. luxuriantly every year for forty yeara, so At times it seorncd that the �esoel would pe that the primary cause of failure is neither roll completely over. Then the cargo . Pl fungus nor insect diseases, nor noxious began to move, to starboard, and by the ezoretions, nor shade of grain crops, but ie time the rudder chains were temporarily re- probably due to the exhaustion of mineral paired the vessel had a heavy -list. It was wi ki fertilizers, or available combined nitrogen, inipossible to get the steering gear in repair he or nitrifying microbes within range of the so that it could be depended upon, Bind the to roots. Rotation, however, cures clover. vessel was headed for the Falkland Iolanda, be sickness. It took her nearly five months at Stanley V;.,,;• 1 .1 '' to make repairs,and on Feb. 7 last she sail- - I halation as to Temperature. efEdagain. She had fair butvari&oleweather until within 500 miles of port,wheiti a streak . . W hen an apple is f rozdn it makes a good of calms was encountered, and i.t took her deal of difference how it is thawed, When twenty-two clays Fo make, port. ,She sailed in through the Heads with every, piece of pl + your ear is frozen don t, thaw it. suddenly* canvas she could carry set, and' made a fo When onions are frozen if thawed very grand circle to an anchorage off Alcatraz civ gradually they will come out rill right, island, . - °r What has this t•o do -with dairying? This 0p M much : Sadden extremes of � temperature I , :. ZrI O�` BOOk3. - disintegrate: Don't chill the cream with H.—dIn your boy fond of books? , . be chunks of Toa in the churn and expect ;he DR—Very. I gave him a copy of Robin- son Cruaoa tine oticer day and he got lots of a best', results. Don't beat it suddenly from fun out of it, o low degree to the churning temperature H.—I didn't know he could read. - nd churn immediately. Let it stand for ,. D.—He can't read,but he tears the pages fu ome time at the right temperature and out and makes boats of thein, Oh, yes he's se better results may be expooted. Tempers . food of books. - p �, _ _, I.1. I . 1 r. ` I ': .. ,� , I _ . - .: .. _. . - . .- - . 1 - I- - I. ,. 1% r l.fi ,. 3 M y. y� p, 1f1 +� 3 3 �wa i x ,.{ r4 N 'i.9 1 I . :i, e - 4 :! - t- s 4 ., Y� 4 1 f T -3 1 Q ? Y !its ?is-•,., a '?! -a - � , hR - �: ^mit �^ '9' n;. 2r s } ^t��, y ,_b �. may-, ,. �% n Q. _ ' � t2.. f A " _ - 7 '• a w.- ": r e s s t a � . ' {{ 3` !s," x • L - . C} '. c t p F {. 4 .T . k r 3 ,. d s sk . ` v:` �.. R a` i�it)[.JSHt�L.L. - E t , Pstabe9 sed Egli . kY1 �4 'i Mrs. Patera, eats me if I an i io- , __; , , :I t uisitdve. but why gave rm owse pieces et I Q; oth spread out there in the sun? 'telae; •_� I sok like new cloth," remarked Mrs. Frloe., , coking ant of the window on the lfttle , , de rah. r r=a r ' f Po "They arej ndeed." `was Mea. Pe�ersr' : . s 'j ughing rejoinder. "They are pieces of i `=_ ?'.A . ' •,, - y boy's pants for -patches. The garment ' u ,.`- _, ',.` •- as faded somewhat, and not to make the` 41 # art { , ntrast too startling, ;and subject him to ":spa � ,,, 3 •r _ N unkind remarks, I am trying to obtain tbi ",.,=t:' I. me shade on the new piema as we res on ' v, 1 -` � , f e old." � rc : ;. �� ' _. "That - -i an -idea- I`.-bave� levee . ;` , - :1 ought at," sMil Mrs. Price. "It wenid ,-' N _ s a good plan when puttipg new sleeves , , 14 4 K gingham or calico dresses, wouldn't it I" t�� 3?„ " Yes; you would probably have to walla .fid � _a e material in that case." ' ' Yr . c : "I have seen much. discussion of dish. ' - ashere decently," remarked Mrs. Potems. ; ` rc g �.: F z ,F Vf k> i' While visiting a friend I found she had J, , 1 " - Boarded tier dishpan and ones not exactly, - { � .r,- �' dishwasher, but certainly a very orginal _ ; . - - ` a ; "I should like to hear about it," said - u� `=� -1 re. Prioe," in an interested tone. .� "She uses a fifty pound lard can, whiea ' ` `4 e obtained from a store. - Pile the plates . ui -:- i eatly at the bottom, pack the saucers :. Y r ound them, then the cups and the lasses 4 b est. She as, a they will not crack 5 WA `' their sides. She washes the silver and .''I- i I hives separately, as they are apt to be - .:. ' 4�, i retched. Cut a light shaving of seep . m to the can and pour two kettles of hot ! ` . �l ester over the dishes. Set the can on a ooden chair close to the table. Then after few moves of a long handled dish nap, ` r µ e dishes were piled on the table to drain, - c `�_ 1 d I must say they.looked very nicer, amid �-. a very short time a large pile was washed. < 1-. d wiped." "That sounds very easy," sighed Mrs. : r r;. 4 ice. "I hope it would prove eo in pros•:. oe." ;; "Suppose you try it and see," was her -, end a suggestion. '' •11 have been experimenting with boiling i i ge," Mrs. Price remarked, after a pause. a'r "And what is the result ?" inquired her' sCaner. '+ , " I have decided that the most perfect " . "� ay ie to lay the eggs in the hot saaoepwn d cover with boiling water. Let them {;, main where the water will keep.hot, but . - - - ot boiling, for ten minutes." ' S' I have a new method, too, which I - : - ave both seen and tried myself. Break ,, :. - ur or five eggs, keeping the yolks whole - - d separate. Beat the whites to a stiff oth and pile on an earthen plate, which • • ill not injure. Drop the yolks at regular servals into t"he whites. Set in a moder. e over. until the whites are brown, when - ,,; � e yolks will be cooked just right for . oat people: , P_ little watching will Are- nt their getting too hard." . " I think that must be a pretty dish," as Mrs. price's comment. �, i. " That to one of its advantages," was the ,i ower. - - ,.> _ . . 'ti,F11es Hate Lavender.. "I never r.se window'soreeas," said a wise r M ; usekeeper the other .day, "because I is ve a fancy that theylehtat out. all the air . hot weather, and, besideii, they serve to . ep the flies in the house equally As well ' ' - ou t, f, . "But I never sea a flp in your house;" ° `� ' id her friend. Huw do you .manage its ? - .. ` _ r. my part, I must confess that screens no screene,my summer means to me one - . nes battle with the tittle pests." - . "My remedy is a simple .one," said the . od housekeeper, "and I learned it years . o frgm my grandmother, when I used to:.' Bind watch her putting bunches of lav- - , der flowers around to veep the Elise away. y method is simpler. I buy b cense' ' ' ;Y• -� Orth Jal;Ail of;lavender at the drug store. ; d mix it with the eame.quantity of water. hon I put it in a common glass atomizer d spray it around the rooms wherever - . es are apt to cougregate, especially in the - ning•room. where Isprinkle it plentifully er the table linen. The odor ie especially .. eaareeable to fliers, and they will never - . afore in the neighborhood, though to '' '; oat people it has a peculiarly fre.jh and _ ' atefu! smell." M - How Fruits Are Served: - :. _ - . Oranges are cut in half and eaten with an "' ange spoon. The peel serves as a cup.. , Pineapples are peeled, cut in very thio ces, the core out out, and served with gay . .. - � - Bane�nse are slightly opened at one encs- , d served on individual fruit plates. Irk Berries are usually put in a large berry , .. • wl -anti served in individual dishes at ble. Grapes are placed on a large fruit dish -- th green leaves around edge. s Often several kinds of fruit are placed is e large fruit dish on the table, at:d each • ", soon provided with an individual fruit: I oto. " ., Oranges eaten in the. natural state, or - th the pulp prepared and simply sprin- ed wive sugar, are ao delicious and - `? aithful that it seems almost unnecessary - x i ` suggest other' wikys in which they may. - �. utilized. v} - � `° - �.L - - Reeipes. ; _, - s Lettuce Salad.—Carefully• •'Vvash and,. ick ;�` ace in• the salad dish sufficient lettuce [ r dinner..: Slice four hard boiled eggs ` er the top. Then take a cup'of rich, sour .,r,`�: .' earn, half cup of vinegar, ,three table `fa pons of sugar, one teaspoonful of salt 5 is well and pour over the lettuce. Strawberry Trifle.—Put a quart of straw ' �-= tries in a fruit dish, eprtnkle with sugar S nd . powdered cracker. - Then -make a . ' ustard of tae and one-half piute-of ,nick,. '' \': three eggs, half cup of sugar and a spaott " x ;: 1 of corn starch. Pour over the berries .L ` r= aiding hoi. When cold cover with whip. ' g-;, ,, „ ped oream and ser. r x �, 8 4 KL 1 { } Y. . C -_ a.3 } 3 d Y. i .. - _ _ .. !i '' . I ` t �r '4 1 Y °/ ^ v d, u. `' t J th-- � . tE•' , 1 : + 2 a . J' 31t `�- x i. t- r - "i'� - - 1 .r' 3� 1% pv_g - . '' ' .. n 1. ' .. ._' : iS��'-J, �s•, �'. 1+5' (k1 q=7 y�_s•`d't{ , ?-s fa.,:e - _ i' h '10 '111 .. 'I � 1100� �� - ,� . 0. , . , 'fit- ,ctz,, r a s + �, - ' -2 I -::a G• -.x , _ --- 8 i .ta?a„2.�,•:.,,..x �. - s,�. a�:e i~:3.. -. i7 ,-., ,..'r&•*.7. 9 t' a.iva- .. - r '�a� :., # - 5 R¢ .: :y .� e , - .. -- - - 'bu._... - - ->, - t ;rte. �;: .;,,,,r 1� 17: ,- - . .-. 9 -, .a. -e• --- 6 Y,..r,T t . _ :. -. - , . - _ - . __ f...: .. • >~:. �. ... ..-.. -..., :",. p.; .n,, . Y' . ilk '�.3.;:•:.' n - .. .... , . -s- ... S_ y...j, er. s Vii•.: L"' "''. .- '".`'.'_ v _. -. e. . .._ . ,. .. NW t I. } =a: - .....r!F.::. ,, ,,.. _ - Vii,» .-L • !Y 11� , . .. 6 .. -.. -..- 5 _. - � .. - .-,. .. . .. -... - .- .�. -- i-.�i - v.9.a+a;.K.�. -. .s•`t'•%..?- < --r. ,a:..c f.�4'10� q :-;�"�.-. l.: - S '�iF •t :...- .. t , m ... .. :r r, �,}a� _ }� :F� ` >• _ .. . ., u•• ♦. E!F .�.. !p ' - r v 'F A - e .. &-• -.t. +, ter._. M.Y .'tee .: ^'ii.:. -.- . ' . l • - i. as . .. _- 9Z 1 - . : F .. a ,e - ,v> n .4 .'CAi r T' ,.a-.':,� a., ,. , +d -iA 4�rrF <y ,a. - f_ t ,,�-[.�,� r W.-,.� . - -, s ... .. : a .. Y +% , .. 7- ,-f - `� - +. .. - `.'f. ' _ 5 _ - ` : , , ,� lsX _ r �5 I a1.°c. f . €,_ _ .. _ ' r - . -» -ate .. '' --:. r:. Z.,_. -...: -: -( :. - -..:. �1 I ''n 2 .,i y t 4. -. .,. -.- 1.-..l. - rim.-,. _. - -.. �.S"?,4 I, ..r ,•4 , l,E h e 4 '?. ,_ -.,. b F. .r X: , ..r. -: -.. ... .. -. G a G - .. - _ r -. , - ..: a ,5. .. e<. - :'- . .. .c - - .. .. _ _ ... .. 1 - ,,y. ... - _ _ ... 4 -i - ., S .. - .... ...,r. - , - - 1.- - i pp f 1 ... 1 11. -,'�,. -:5�� . illl ,. , . -.11 I 1 -... e . - ]r . I11.. -. .. ._._.., .. - - _ - _ ,�... - - .. .r .. - - - - j.., z - , , s .. ` - • , Ftt)rport. , f n .- B Of Bhin les at the Picker. All �raae g TO IIR 6UBSOMRBRS : By re err) `;I -_ ! 111 - i to a Pddrees label nn your paper yo lumber and '�* r r _ - I can )wage ascertain the date to Ing y 0ominissioner Hadley bad a arrange ' 9u esbeanp melon to Talc Niawa is i .. -Dr. Cross, (Dentist), visits Pickerin tteherman Dp befbre Squire Parker the 1 t DeBda office over Bank. _3tf ` N e ittanoee are taknowled,e.�1 a eYeY.y T y, other da , char with carr in a nn in _ y : ; , change of da e- on label on the Stet payor f y y q g greaei of money at this,o1noe. Alwa�e -Dont forget the excursion to th a place frequented by game during the ts. - 10'� p 4t Farm, GDeI h, on Tuesday rex , n, we are not misinformed G0 0 •� . . . rase,, the date aid ahead. Model a , p close seaso _ i. � - a I-- .."'. '. .I - 5 to throw -I June -2bth. the poor fallow had not Many gC0 . - - - -The Friends' yearly meeting wall- b!e away, yet be was breaking the law and of 1.. - 1 tom+ held in Newmarket this year. They wi 1 course the magistrate had no option in the. !° . � iCV � X� � . week. matter. Why does, not the commissioner d i :.I start neat we - -Mise Ettie Margaoh, Who has beep serve all alike? there are parties seen F��, , . ;: . a tending the Normal school, Toronto, is frequently bunting aionnd the bay; yet we - , . PICgERI G, ONT., JIINE `�1, 1898 have not heard of another case being taken ,. some for her summer Vacation. 0 ., • -Miss Persia Nilson, of Toronto, and before the magistrate: Unless theca game 1 L.� .laws are inforced in all instances their use- , v..- �. ;.... - Miss Edith Argue, Bowmanville, are fnlneBB is hard to conceive. Coyne Mr. . .. I ­ ­ .i " . .. .i - .- '- - . .. .11 - .. -1 ­ .. JJO ALI SM S visiting with Mies Allegra Cronk. Hadley, don't be bluffed by those western� . 1. - -We understand that Mrs. W• V• fellows. Arrest every gun you find, and if ' . - Wright and family will 000upy a cottage i ! . : the man won t give it up, arrest him to1. . ca,' : -�drs, R, Cropk is vision in at Rosebank during the neat few weeks. �-- -. -An exciting lacrosse match took place College Closing Exercises, _ Chippewa. on the College green on Tuesday evening. - - -F. G. 'toga - is home from Ann Arbor ; ` , . I ' j -' for vacation. As. a number of the pupils were not The closing concert in connection with ., . Ladie's Blouses cheap. }t - i preaen.t and sides were chosen. Pickering' College was held Wednesday . Fancy Crepons for Blouses. ' - 1..; -A.-B. an on SatDodaswell, of Tgron• y July 2nd, T. Poueher, evening, June lmh, in the prettil deooraG- to, were here y, -0n Tuesday, - y ro•, - ! . Fancy Cream and Pirik Ducks. -German Lin on, of Toronto, has'been' oommisaioner, will the following road ed schoolroom. A .most lateresting p y � . _ fob . Gravelling on side -road between gramme was provided by the lady students New ,�toek of Fstncy Print9. Ii.' here with friends or a week, _ coneistin of numerous piano solos and an Fine lane curtailas Cheap. -Rev. J, T. C dwell 'and wife, of,)Jlid- lots 10 and 11, in 6th con.,- at Z p. m. R -Mrs. Stewart and daughter, of Tor• admirably rendered cantata entitled the' Curtain Net by the yard. . ' . ` land were here last week caliing upon .old -Flower Pilgrims." The ehoroses were 1 'I . ' I- ,, onto,'. were Here this week on their way - Fancy Screen and Cheese Clotll. . • friends. .z to Breebin and Mud Lake to visit friends. sweetly and in come cases brilliantly sung y (Dentist) vi i� be by a trained choir of -twenty voices, the, Silk Lace Mitts and Gloves. ", _ , . -Dr. F. L. Her The 'were were the guests of D. F. Every. I ' . . . ' 1 found at the Gordo House Parlor's every colo-parte taken by the music teacher. a Dotted Muslin and l�Iosquitto Net. I, Tuesday. 88t i -The cic -ing exercises of Pickering Miss F. S. Morrie, A.T.C.M. Miss J. H. Fa119, Perfumes and. Toilet Soaps. L.. �: College took place Wednesday, and in the Wetherald, elocutionist of Toronto, lent �.� -Mrs. Cobe1dick and• Mrs. Cole, of , , .Summer Goods of all Linda.. _ , ' . - evening a literary' and musical co$bert variety. to the entertainment by her charm , Newcastle spent Sun ay with their broth- was held, attended b a number of their - Everybody invited to call. . er Mr. Parson. Y ins recitations. The college ofiiciala Fare friends aw well as the pupils of the college. to be congratulated on this successful tilos• .. a._ -Mrs. Madill, of reemare, adebm• -The yearly meeting of the (orthodoz) ins to a most euacesefnl year. . `- . panied by Miss Pa:tt rson, visited with . . . . . Friends commences here today (Friday). The oollege. will re open for the fall : • I - hie weekSept.3rd 1895. The four depart - _ friends here t BDeiness meetings will be held each week term on Bet . --•I,t is rumored _th t Mrs. John And r4 . - yew lies purchased he Guthrie pre day for one week, while on Sunday public menta:-eo -collegiate, commercial, prepare• : boy ,magic and fine arts, will, as hereto - f_: onth, meetings will be held at 10 a.m. ands fore be maintained. Arrangements are Sour Lemons and Fresh Fruits in Season• 1.�,_� wises on Church etree s m. The public will be made welcome _ . -Miss �. Swallow and Mica Annie p p being perfected to make the 'commercial � •-• Gonda Ever Fresh �Ild eW•. P. Stephens, of Toronto, re the Deets of at these Sabbath gatherings. P p ' ' ' ' g -Geo. McKeown, Pickering's wool and mucic de artments more cow late V v l�rs. Wm. Harris this eek. than ever. .The announcement for 1895.9E �x merchant, has shipped man tone of tHec y y� j� / •. �. ,;", . - V. Richardson was in the city y will be read `Jul H N CIE: la �J Tuesday attending a m sting of the share product during the present season. _-_____.rs is now in the market to purchase wool at BROOK ROAD. - I I • '.e , }folders of the Ontario ank. Highest. prices. The,quotations this week -- -------------- -- - ---- - -- • - - - --The construction f J- H. Bpndy's ___ _ _ !-1 .I... maty tinshop on $ins et set steadil pro• r R'1 are from 11 to 20 cents per pound. See Mrs. Trull visited with Mrs. Poynter ------------------ - ' . y hie stock of yarns, tweeds and flannels. lately... n L l�. 1 a - es• He ex eats, to ecu thelbuild- the Promi,ied La d" jj''''�� Potato %grass p . I -- I?y laude of the ace. Cowan visited `�` �jl�,�11 .g .: .. � . . - h embers and fr Exc . .. : `. ing within a short time, Gherrywuod Ugion Sabbath school intend on Sunday last. . �. •-L, A. Findlay, f the M'idma - . . y 3 y Mr. gild Mrs. W. Allaway,- of Pickering, : V • haying a garden party at William ' r Gazette, wife and chit ,are here! dor & Mone 's lane, on Tuesday, ,June `L6th. Bandaged at Brock R��a i, I r�., ten days visit with their parents. ILou is y p y W. Peebles was in the Queen's city last . • much pleased with hie curare urj. west. A first class afternoons amusement is ;Week, butter and wool are now the leading The cheapoet and most e$ective insecticide on the market. ` . ` proivised for those who can make it eon topio for converaation. , Applied Dry -No mixing required. Always ready and cafe to handle. -We regret ezceedi glv to state tha venient to attend. For a complete oat- . . Dr. Walter Thom, of Dnnbartan, is very line of.the ro ram see bills ust iapued. Mise Snellgrove and Blii►e Cornish, of Being a strong fertilizer, it etrer.�;thens the sines, makes potatoes larger end better.krprogram l Liudsa , visited the former's brother here, .Has been u in the United States Cor- the past three years with great success. } ' ill this week. His Host of frier ds are y ai nsl awaitii, tidin s of His im• -The Union School picnic at "Rose• and of course went. to "Aosebank." Applie the vines with s veru Sne sieve, in the morning, when the dew ie on, it an o y g E; bank" for 1895, is now a thingrof the R. Lawson, of York, accompanied by his will remain until the whole crop of bugs then hatched out is killed. Fifteen pounds to pt•ovement. est, and may be numbered with the sister, visited with Mr. Kayes last week. the acre is sufiiciept if care is taken in distribntinq it• and only 2c. per lb. . • 4. -A number of recruits aReedlthr.oagh p . he ionic at Iiosebank. For Fruit Trees -Apply in Lhe morning, when the trees are in bloom'. For - ¢•- N things that were. While the event has They also took i t p _ here for Whitby on Tuesday, where they •transpired and passed Froin vision, the 11. Wright, of Claremont, former) w of Sbubber-y, Plants, Eta. -Apply any time when the insect appear. Hills Carcalio, Etc. .1 Iintended joining the 34th Battalion 1 now er the 14th this lace, pufcl a Sue cart from H. V, sale by young folks will long rPmemb P _ - in camp there. 1896, with pleasure. Games 1J• Poynter "recently, wonder what is . " J. Re$Zln 1C erin_ -Mrs. Fred Storey, formerly of the of June, -- -- ---- - _- -- -- -- ----- -- ---- or races won, friendship - formed, and meant. _ _ F Luke shore, but now residing up ,west, is Yee, Brook Road ie stilt in ezistance, - :' 00 S � . - . . . - i '- .. - . .. ' I ! - I -, boat rides enjoyed. all will help to . re here just now with Tbos.Field and wife,Mr and can now boast of a newsoffioe, num- _ T mind us of the da sent on the bank of G d , *s . a, . and Mrs. Storey removed frgm' here y p berlese re rtes and a phonographic talk• �. I I- . . . . ., the lake where nature seerns to -have as p° G.. . -. .. . I - .­ . about 12 years ago. j ing machine..- I . . ; . - elated -Mr. Cowan to locate a beautiful Our town resembled Goldemith'B "De• �1� , -J. J. Kelso, of Toionto', whose ;duty camping round. While there may have - f it is to look after abused and meq anted p g g y sorted Village" on Friday last as near)y all been a larger attendance on former o0 of our people weal to the picnic, and re• $:.. Children, was here -Friday and gve�ns fl 's atheriD was one of t a most delightful time. We Dave placed in our stock, the best assortment of call. He had some business to 'ookl after casionB, Friday q R pot g - �_ immense proportions. Some 1700 P� hat we would like to know.. -Why ,� - hereabouts, it is said. adults passed the gates, while the various .Mr. 8--o was in such a burry on the day " -t Worsteds, .. ' ... - . -Much clover:bas been c t id this - , 1.rchoo.s were Admitted, free, therefore of the picnic that he could not wait for the vicinity during the past week and the could not be kept track of. One w' uld rest of the school ? Who owns the buggy � . Tweed, - - yield is much below the leash expecLa• that will safe) carry five on Sunday ? If . „ I „ be quite safe in saying that there ere y TrOt18P�1"ingg ,,: tion, The timothy crop is ab nt a to6t►1. H. is going to learn the pump making. We t a� 4000 person at Rosebank on Friday. �, failure- The oattle have long since been. d' the hear lie goes. to the factory often ? And Su�tingS of < li)))ds. The day was somewhat warm an 1.. accorded free access to many meadows. We think it would be a Rood idea for , roads dusty for those who drove, bu the herb to carr a larch li ht or wear a bell „x ' -William Logan: is making prepare breeze from 'i•he lflke moderated the m y R For Spring. 1.for bnildin an eztensive oil and �Qr in some such way diewngnieh himself) I. tions R erasure of the grove, in the shad tflA when he oes oat for hi• evenin walk, or ' � storehouse. Men are now at vgork War- P, g g See cur Wall Papers, they are tbe' best we ever h . air was delightful, - At intervals during he may be the first to fall a victim to 1� :_, ing down the old shed and stable, to per• the.afternoon the Whiwvale band a liv• L. - - mit of the new etructnre, whin will loin Bam'e gun, for is last- issue B., You know ened proceedings, Leader Ward an his • Was warned to guard against snail 1 BC. � "UNT . _ e R a- ■ �' � . the store proper to the we t. VPh n. ,� " cow lei;ed; this baildin will be of con• oolleagnes deserve nredit for the ma mer creataree, so beware, for Sam is a danger- M eP ble dimeneione. ' in which they filled their pari of pro one fellow. .1 - �� gram, when we ooneider that this and #""�"'�" . --A number of our aorrespondenie Auot-Er. ENT*has been rather unfortunate of is in .. I I - .. .f I te. This To ke o ahave been la in h o � .- playing g y. . will not do, our neighborhood Cannot af- loaing a number of rte' best plc are. - y g With diligent' practice the old stag and Miss Jeanie Linton tial returned to - - ford such Conduct. Come good people will be reached. Owing tlo the to nese Whitby. - help us give all the news of the locality. r in the lake the steam ills Miss Laura McCarthy ie at present I - . . . We do all we can, but our scribes frust of wale y l Ae the dark dreamia clouds of depression areliftiil assist, else our efforts will rove futile: could not portorm their duties of MIS- visiting Her old sohoo friends Heist , g p g� gas prove but the hild• Walkerton ' And the gleam of prosperity over us glows, . -Accompanied by Dr, Eastwood,,,we in 8� as was the intention, All .lave recovered from the' Roeebauk � _ felted the Black creek, in Scott CQ ren were treated to boat rides and were 'Tie a suitable time to look over wardrobesI. v �P, therefore not in the leant disappo nW pio•nio none the worse for wear. - And serously think %bout getting new clothes. - ship, Sa nrday and succeeded in catohipg Much interest was manifest in lh var. College closing d� rew some of our lovers1. .. 32 nice trout. No doubt the number of education on Wednesday evening last• 1. ,,xI'lle.f ions games of foot ball betwee the As the above conviction ctrl es you, and you are moved to vigorous. -- z � would have been much larger had toe f3everal of our young folks attiended = weather been less hot and- clear. Thclee varioae school tea•ns, while a num er of action, we would ask you to kind) remember that we make clothes and make #� Gieeowood on Tuesday evening god en- { who fish for trout i+;ll readily nttderstand games of s similar nature war i e joyP.l themselvbe al tLe social. them right regarding price and general make-up. We live in Pirie's Block• what we mean. Bulged in by senior teams from v tion We must congratulate our friends �� parte 'of Ilia neighborhood. The v tions B MAGA H PICS ING'S -Y. P. S. C. E. Missinner>� meeting, Miseee Gee and Ciibaon, to our worth; on ++i �`'' Sabbath, June 23rd. Topic : "Th world athletic oonteste between the pupils ware :... . • r. a sonrae of mmol} interest, but we were having Passed ilia final and 2nd gear 1. `,-, for Christ. Missionary sooisti of the work respectively. I F'ASHIO ABLE TAILOR. _ _ village will be represented b Mra. Dun• unable to procure a list of prize•Wi Hers - g P y as the committee did not creep tra k of garden Party in Hine�le tonight gives---��---�-� : -bi.r, Mrs. R. Rogers, and Miss Bertha remise of being one of much cones• ! • `'• - . the names, as the prizes were paid out .,P a -- Palmer. The junior bands will take part manna. No doubt plenty of Audleyites 1 i3 Yi !� ��� as each contest concluded. The and 9 (� j (� = , , f in the singing. Mrs. Dicdre twill speak will be seen there. r��I - i s B'. - .. �on Mission Work." The asnal Mission• red yard foot race between Thomas en. . Henry Madill Lae rsinrned to bis work a i demon, of Dunbarton, and James last, ' �j . ary collection. Mise Dale, M,R. after the week a lay off tbroagh an attack - - I r. -C. H. C. Wright and family have of Pickering Colla e, roved to be a taken n their residence at the lake, oc great attractions find Wae woe b the of pleurisy. Take good care of yourself �+ That's IIB:; W�1&it W0 Oer. i P Harr as goad men are scarce they say. on in the cottage erected there b Mr. latter with apparent ease. It was y• "� - py R y Edward Dunlop returned Tuesday after Wrightthis s yin It is expected that. for a arse of $80. It is said there was P y ...-•-;v. I' Oil this month. ILL. g p_ R• p fl` weak s Visit with bis relatives and -' a number of families will cam out down considerable aide betting indulged min , - P connection therewith. While eu h a • friends of his younger days. He hue re`-�'� at the mouth .this season.' Why go covered from a sickness, and oonsegaen• - bVBr depllr men Of . _ race is highly interesting to witnee , we - . _ away to Muskoka or any ether far away ! is not as robust as we would like.- � - - . lace, when we have so convenient a scarcely think that euvh a contest s oald y "� p Farmers have taken in a large acreage - - - t r oampin round within ens a�oess to be allowed in connection with s oh a - • . 01�r f3tOr8 - ; g _g y of bay this week, but vie b®liave that, as & � the village. gathering as the Union School pion o., as - it is ante to Dense un leasantness. Dur• one said, there will be acres' to the ion, ` R ', :' -Betsy Gibson, relict of the )ate John p rather than tons to the acre. Old heads �_�'�1/ yO�I Wl� Find �al"a1nS. Burrall, died at the residence of her ins the- aftsraoon . a wayward boy a in bays rare) seen such dr weather in the -- - _ - = S daughter, Mrs. Jenkins, charge of a youth named White, from y y _ Whitt on Bfiu• month of June. „ -y g y' Whitby, caused some commotion. The A } t. �► ,, �"_= _ -- j = Iii' day, .Tune i6th, aged 70 years. Deceased It is rumored Mise Hate Bray is to re. { -'"` LADIES. Look at our with her.late ha8band Hae -been a resid• 1,°y was intoxicated and euooeed d in driving oyer a table laden s►itb d sties. turn to Michigan shortly to slay a while • r V Z:• "" trimmed hats at 19c. to $12.00. a enc of this township for a' number of with her brother who but recently lost + . you will be. pleased with the - ., t .. The horse was promptl taken chs ge of ,_; �- �•-_ years and had many friends. The fancy- y hie wife. Her many friend will -be sorry ----�x _- ! . and retained until the driver regain d his - al took place on Tuesday afternoon from senses, when be made good the d mage to miss bar again after Ler pleasant so- styles and satisfied with the low the residence of W. F. Jenkins, Whitby, and departed. After paying all ex nses 3ourn amongst us. prjpeg, l0c ' Dress Muslin 80, 5c Silk Gloves 15c, Parasols 200 to $8-W, : _ >. j �" . . and after service in the Methodist ohurob, The committee )lad some ,1120 left A There is a new pest to bother farmors Li ht and Dark Print 5, 6, 8, 9, and 10c, Lot of Lace Curtains 35C to 1.1. 1..-- Pickering, the interment was;made at the appearing, earin this time on our applelrees. . 11 Friend's Cemeter east of the villa e. verified staemept will shortly appear in p, g' $4,5Q per pair. Every curtain a bargain.. - y g these columns. A number.of the a hoole Ngtioe carefully eume-of the leaves and. THE MEN'S NEW STORE -Here yon ire l $1.50 Black Serge I— : The family have much sympathy,. ou will see a sort of insect attached to arrived in wagons de orated with ever: y ` T -New Catholic church at Oshaaa will greens and bunting, nt such di plays the leaf standing on end, These are Pants $1.00• $1.75 Fine Tweed Pante $1-.25. $12.00 Read} AZade Suits be opened on Sunday nett. Rev. Father were mol ae extent ve as on f twat )hick on some )cages and soak the juice (Mens ► $8.00. - Boys' $nits $1.50 to $.6.00. Mon s suits to order $10.75' . Jeffaott has, made arras menta b therefrom, killing the leaf. Some to $25.00, See our cloth before ordering.. Dens Felt hats, hard and soft, 4 8e y occasions. Many moa went from this are be 'nein to look m. Men's Straw Hats 22c to $1.50. . which a special train will leave Toronto locality by train, therbfore, there were orchards they ba Ki g 49c to $18.00, 50 styles to select fro r. ' at 9 a..m., and the same will reach Pick- not near)y so many rine on the oande brown. This will necessitate a general WALL PAPERS. --Not t o late• yet to brighten your home. We sell ` _ Bring about 10- o'clock. Those who do et in former ears. Next year we mould eprayinq of the trees. j sire To attend from this arish'will find y y ADdley sehocl bad a' ftroup icture at $' 4, 4 amid up to 35c roll, wi b border and ceiling to math. P advise that the prizes be made 1 er, as . BICYCLES. -We have .s ld a number of Bicycles at $50, $60. $75► 44 plenty of acommodation upon reaching the finances of the- organization a e in a taken with som&others, ou Tburs ay, by . Oshawa. This special trai,a will remain very healthy condition. In 'I8 we a good Toroato artist. The pictures and $1110 and in every „ase bele, city price.. nee them and order at once. , �- :,t, ' all day,'re2Drninq in the evening. Arch expect the crowd will be larger the ever, promise to be true and the beet of the WATCHES ANA CLOCKS. -Clearing oat a big stock of Jewellery almost p y at your awn pride $4.00 clock $2.75. $5.00 clocks $8.25. $6.00 clocks '' bishog Walsh will not be able to attend May we be there to see. g aohool sines we can remember. Nc n _ 7I as he leaves for Europe. in a few days, is asked unless picture is satisfactory. $4,25.:- $Cys. Watches, $2.50 u , Mans $5.00 up'. 7 Jewell American more" k � , 1. but t� a opening wil_i be preached Wm. Cotter of the Pedlar Metal Roof. All the parents should liave one for the 7 54 Haltdsome Gold Watch $1t3 ladies) Gents by Bishop O'Connor, of Peterboro. ing Co: bad Iiia foot injured by ha isle eti elnldren s sake. They ars cliea and are went 1» bat1d30me page, $ . pp ►aid .Wtoh 2ti, Retrie�nber' a arc closing out this depe�rtment. • ` ^_ - - • Father Jeffoott's man trier do i Picker• - Somethin for•' wbibb the . owe rin vil( 1 y steel rail fall on it and is laid Dp. R thank the par fr+ l oat .y are a ' - ,-, �_' •' . . j I 11 itnR will be pleased to )ceryl that he has W. J. Hornton, President of--th Army , :: '- , s _ • 'tie shop _ 4`� ani our .isaks the + r "4 ens:... = t - i : 'aacceerled sqwell with the eieat}on of the and Navy Veteran r Baciety of H iltoi�,: p M . alfav Morn, Wed., Fri., at 6 o clock. Plea i� [ ;, r3' 1.' :' ' - , , 0 . f ti.!• d :iia #A �' , 3 k`,.w �.2 y. , t ,4 ,Qk. � xiew St. Gra o s ehurob. t , W, }" ., , ,��` .-x _ _ g V. 1B 2y118Bia with the d fubds4 .,, ,_. ter. as r ., g v , . ?•.F' _ -r •v a . s , t:. sm.. _�.. -+,: k� 3- .. .. ' ` _ "1 w: 5C."',�15. 3.- ...d - _... - _ ..: .. , : . - U t. k ,-,„'r✓'iY..,t S . 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