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The Huron Signal, 1881-12-23, Page 6
F If 1r 1; f 1 , That Lass 0' Lowrie THE HURON SIGNAL, FRIDAY, DEC. 23, 1-81. centra aother, "so there has; I heti leen rather inclined tot prwu,uee it creature, never strong, and often suffer- could find tee rather solution to herobYR• ?meIllaselsiee, chaps, look yo• here, The ,villeins hes "eututienal," coal wwehuw or other loge and its verb frailty drew Juan beat- piunship of the parsons. I t3RAXI1TtU. XL'. I vitrioled Kira.' I could out quite direst himself of the idea er to it. It was Sully like Lis, pretty 'cloy laid him upon the shutter they that she needed the special guidance of and infa•,tiue. Many a r,ugh but ex- perieuce 1 mother, seeing it, p uphestwf that its hat'!u t. i:h life would brief, With the pretty face, it heel nberitul also the helpless, irresolute, appealing look. Joan aew•thi liu the baby's eyes sometimes, and w sitartlet at lies fetulli- arity ; u* en the tut ,tea cry h.•ul in it something g that was viinfQlily like its girl• mother's voice, More thltn once a sense of fear ?e.. l come upon Joan w hell she heard aii ! rr-ogfuized it. Rut her hove only see..tc.l to stn egthen with later dread bey' by day those who wetted with her felt more streengly the change dercloping se subtly in the girl. The massive beauty which had almost seemed to ;net 1,N('ASHlht: L '.L NIINES Its Fe .'° otia;,,iN BURNETT. ILles out int the Knoll Road is • minute more. • • 1 11 teach her to go agen me, be muttered. "I•1i teach her, by--- but the benteece was never traded. Then was a lnurrnur he did not under- stand, a rush, a heavy rain of blows. a dash of something in hit ;ate that scorched like liquid tire, and with • had brought, and carried him homeward. Joan and Derrick were nearest to hitu as they walked. They were not far from the cottage, and it was not long before the I light glimmered tupon rough the window l them. Seel g et, Joan turned to Der- riek suddenly. "I mon hue} un before," she said. "I mun ge and say a word to Liz. ('..m- in' aw at .nct the s.i.ht u,l fear her." Reaching the house, she pushed the dear open and went in. Everything was I w quiet that she fancied the girl must have gone, to bed. "Liz," she said aloud, "Liz l" Her voice fell with an echoing sound a well-balanced and experienced mind. The well-balanced and experience.) mind in question was his own, though of corse he was not aware of the fact that he would not litre leen satisfied with that of any other iudividnal. Ile WM all the more disinclinedto believe in J econversion because his interviews�a h her continued to be as uuaatisfactory as ever. Her manner had altered; she had tone.) Clown s,wewh*t, but she still carts• rd him to feel ill at ease. If she did not defy him any louger or set his teaching at teettght, her gee a eyrie reeling on him silently, lad la tines the edict of leaking Ids w.1tds fail 11iui; which was a Inert' experience with the rector. shriek, ho fell writhing. mein the silent room She looked at..............• L.wric 1.e••au to sink acorn itself was . beginning to wear a "Is it true as tha's jived th' i•fetl - ody's :" Thwaite's wife asked Joan souewhat'uervously. She had learned to lie fold of the girl, LA.1. Pass. Kap'.. d*a'd. Alfx'd. Godericb.Lv 7.O9ani 12.06pw 3.1Sp•*.. 9.01.Iani tiwfurth 7.64.1" 1.10 " 6.43 " 10.40" tmratfurd.Artlemint t.lSpmt 6.3wp. 1.( " Mid did not like the idea of belie vele in istrattu1'a.s. Eap's. ?teed. MIs'd. bur ttefee:ion. fee tie (veneer/D l Mr. W. 1t. Merin ith, Q. t'., •i. P. P. advised the Fin nc Cuntuittee •ef the Loam, Ont., City uunoil that it had no p,ewUr to remit 1taxed. 4;. iwpreasmr of the late Conven- tion is ahba;n by the tmrtoun iu which he pruaeets John A. with a very tell hat labelled •'chhnetiv," and eitherwiae the•se:11 am a swell of the first water. He ho1.l* in his hand a jumping jack laboll• ud '•Tory party." ' The Huu. E. Blake and J. Gordon Itr,wn are the onl.ukers. J3,hn s.,addressing the Tory party says: '•Vow if ye ei have the most uubonnded --- the bed and saw the child lying there visibly. A3 the doctor perlisted, the ditfureut aspect; the defiant bitteruotes!cutittlence in WO, the most utter, regard- asleep.Liz was not with it. She ,eased j reaction was powerful, and remedies of look and tone was almost a thing vi lea and unlimited confidence, hold up r i 1 'teeth hands hells .the string.) 'There ! n'HAI TEIe XXX. quietly into the newt adjoining and i were of no avltil H. !.} upon the bed; the past; the rough, •�.uteutptuotw speech (r„ the Grits) What do you think of that r spontaneous enthusiasm 1" RETRO:: TION. glanced around, It w.,e empty. ' Weed at flees uncenacions, at times tossing to A urinate tater thee,, ruled put Joan, by some irupntse, she went back to the !and fee in delirium. During her watch- in the tiarkuess, two men, stumbling and Ileo, and in beading over the child saw ire at the bedside, Jowl learned the cursing as they went, out of breath, her. • slip of paper punned epee its breast, truth. S.nuetinles he fancied himself n•r-atrie':en, and running a the top of and upon this paper Jean roadie the j tramping the Knell Read hone rerd, their speed, sprawling, uncertain hands he knew so I thr•ugh the rain, and thou he.muttered ••lit wet Lonrrie hissen; by she ,tell- sullenly of the "day" th:►t was coming our say. as he ttaaheai bra •• ••Isereekeet be Leri •t. i tr, hum, and the vengeance he was re- heard 'turning to take; sennetiutJs ha went Fief. r : Feyther, where are yo, V* hen Derrick euteetel the deer, he through the scene with •loan'herself, and 1Freyther, are ye nigh neer she cried, "fee .i:e heard Lrdtir blows and shriek. f,.uud Joan standing alone in the centre ; aeaiu he waited, behind the he.1i a for his t of the remit, holding this scrap of paper , enemy, one element exultant, the next Ian. •there cene„no answer to her ear, cur - The rapid ,eat L('ntin, upon the road, tri Iter handl. I striving to struggle to.his feet with cur - sea upon his lige an.l rage in his heart, as their echo dj•in:; ill the distance, made he caught the s:nutl •'i the advancing the only sound that broke the stillness. , There was ni,t even a gran. Yet n few steps he knew s , well. As hu went CHAPTER 1XX1. was less seething and more merciful when 'f at rare intervals it broke. forth. "Suintnat has corm over her," they said among themselves. "Happen it wur trunbie. She wur different, seine - how." . They were s.nnewhat uneasy under ' this alturlitien, .but, on. the whole, the general feeling was by no means un- friendly. Tilne had been when they had i known Joan Lowrie only as te "lass" who held herself aloof, and yet in a wanner overruled thenr but in these days more than one r etinted, uvor-worked girl. or woman .foetid her hard task rendered easier by Joan's strength and swiftness. NICKS 1 1.0ttAL t: C IDE. -Of the many :tildes and Sued and Plaut CAtelouues seat out by our t'eedawen and `: utsery- n►en, and flint are doing so much to in - one the people and beautify and enrich sur country, ,tone are so beautiful, none sir in.trl.tire as Vick's F!.errl °Hier'e. its paper to the chokes,, its illuan-enema hendseelee, and given the thousau.l,while is Colonel Mies are gouts. This work, although euJtin; but tun cents, is hand- some utt.uelt for a Gift Book, er a place on the prior tete,. Published by Jas. Vice, Rochester, . V. pacers from her, lay n battered, Lircrliu, THE Ks4a-sED'IL • over i':ese *eerie% .t, tin and a;ain, it was I It was true that his quiet and unre- furn:. There was no Yet -eerie teas, she , • • 11` won't live," the (.aver 1 eel to plain ett•.0 h to the listener t i It thus I netted efforts had *mouthed Grace's path cot;': 1 ace .,1ile the i•a.,uu outline, ..f the , Derrick. `'He's net the ane to get j vete`•eauco hail (alien upon Itis own to some extent. •)here were ill-t.sed figure, Which might he that. of either one . over such injuries, powerful as he looks. ! heat). r e• . , .. 'crit, the He has been a reckless, drunken brute, , • The tiny a,tt he ea:rived hid hurts a an::ilarity. in nature a -..c.. tied .deceived .:and what •with the 'heck and reaction i' collier dr..pped nine the Crown with a his-Lluaderine c •m .anions, deceived her nothing will save hien. The clumsy nu- i heavy stick in his hand. als.•; but when she knelt tiowri' and , all who attacked him have Meant '' do I '•1 fun this kno., aticl: nigh a gap ► th' teuchtdt the shoulder, she knew it wee: hint harm enough, but • they, have done_I hedge en th' Knoll Ruad," he said. not the master who lay before her. elute Mote than t:..•�- intended, or at ' ' It wur na fur fro whcer they fun Low- "It'a feyther Nissen." she said, and ; least the ,,tan's antecedents will help ± rie. Happened them chaps, laid i wait them she drew cosy her Incl. shudder them to a result thee may not have ! fur him an' it belongs to one o em," ing, •'It'e"wet wi' Mesal," ahc stride aimed at. 11-e may ea well tell .the,virl, 1 "Let's ha' a look et it," said a young "It's wet wi' bleed ". . . 1 suppose -fine creature, that girl, by 'miner. and on its heieg handed to hits V He did not hear her when she spoke; the way, She won't hare any seutinien- I he inspected it closely. . eee.vas not. conscious that she tried to , tal regrets. It's a good riddance for her, I "Why !" he exclaimed, "it's Lowrie's ra:.1 him; his head-huil, fervartl when to judge from what I know of them." 1 own, I seed him wi' it th'day afore he sh pitted him; lie lay heavily, and with- "I will tell her," said Derrick, wur hurt. 1 know th' shape o' th' knob - out motion, upon her anus She listened to him with no greater I How could it ha'rnttni theer -1" "They ha'. killed him she said. j show of emotion than an increased pal- But nobody cold guess. It was tak- ' fl ori• is it, as it is. rte /dm.' ' . lor. She remembered the ,hounded mall en to Joan and she listened to the story i i.eru was neither light our help near- only as a bad husband and' a bad father. without comment. There was no reason ,r 'Ilan the Crown itself, and when`her 1 Her life would have been , less hard tri why they'should be told what. she had unusually contumacious. . bear if he had died years ago, but now already dircoteret? Nearing the group, Grace token sip 'nee became clearer she remembered h.-. 11'itl:ori 1 a:t and assistance she that depth stood near him, a miserable When Lowrie died, -,nice and Grace I with a faint but kindly smile. ..lo teething; she could not even sense of desolateness fell upon her, 10- were in the teem with Joan. After the "Good morning l", he said, "a pldtaeant '•:.at hurt he had sustained. bead, consistent as such a feeling may seen. fret two days .the visitors had dropped day, friends." , . , y:ng, he mast len here,.until she had; The village was of elcitementelute off . They had satisfied their' curiosity. "Owd Sammy"glanced down at him /eget t help. in, this week. Ererybudy vas ready Lowrie w•as, net a favourite, and Joan with condesuendimil tilerance, He- had s, with suggestions and conjectures, every- had always seemed to steed apart frunr been talking himself, and the greeting ,) 1 ICO off her s.t,•tal. aryl khan- it, body wanted to account for the asaault. ,her fellows, so tliey• were left to them- had broken in upen his e1•apuence ed ha hiadl sett tl}' ui_i n it.. T1 en sloe', "Which on us,"� he .asked (Wye. J; her lips bz hist ear, At first there seemed no accounting for selves. ; r,•yther, she said, _ran goin to; it at all, but at length some one ,•cell-. Joan wasstandiit44 near the bed when "whicken us said it wur eta!' . 7:,,,h,11, to.tltee: If tlia can l eir-Me1' lected that Lowrie had beep last seen there cline to him his first and last A few paces front the gruup of idlers e. :ley osel," - with Spring and Braddy. They had gleans of conaciousuces. The sun wa.•1 Joan tuwrie stood at Work,- Some of 1 '1 Ile dlc;not stir•it.. se she slat uta,ed `•gotten up a row betwixt their*ens, and settee, and iia farewell ,;low streaming the Jaen head noted her presence when.: sec. coni as :et;tl' as ioasil1. and rising ,'other's had punse l lam." through th. window fell upon his disfig- they lounged by, but in the enjoyment to her feet, wetit jai lierway. - There The greatest mystery was the use of areal face and sightless eyes. He roused of their gossip they had forgotten her I suer_• half a dozen teen in the • Kar -room 1 `•'trio. It could only be decided that it himself, moving uneasier.• again. She had seen Grace too; •she had when she pushed the fluor inward and I � not been an ordinary case of neigh. t "What's up wi' me t' he unuttered. heard his greeting, and the almost brutal tato d epee the threshold. Thee I. 'lied hourly "punsing," and that .'.ere must ' I coma see-l.conna- laugh that followed it; and, added to have been a `grudge" -in the ,natter. Joan stepped forwcrd this, she had caught a pacing glimpse of ti :n amalement,; , _ ••Throw en yo' as want to lielp a deein' Spring and Braddy had disappeared, , • Feytber," she said. p the curate's face. She dropped her work liege" aho said, "come wi' • we. jiy i and all efforts to discover . their where: Then memory Mewed • to' return to i nd, before the laugh had died out, stood him. An angry light 1ihot across his lip, confronting the loungers. face. He flung out his hands and "if theer is a mon among yo' as helms groaned- harmed," she said; "if theer's One "What '" he cried, •'Cha art theer, among yo' as he's ivver done aewrnng to, art tha ?" and helpless and broken as he let that mon !peek up.". : was, he wore that moment a leek Joan It was "Owd Sammy" who was the had pang learned to understand. , first to recover himself. Probably he re - watch, had also seen Landsell join her a' "Ay, feyther." she nusw-eretl. few minutes later. It appeared as if. during the few mom - "She wur whimporiu' afore he creole," ents in which he lay groping, a full re - said the woman, "but she cired i' good i cognition eif the fact that he had been earnest when he spoke to her. an' talked baled and beaten after all -that his to him an' hung back as if she could nn ' plotting ha-! been of nee avail forced, it - mak' up her moind whether to go or no. ' self open )nim. He .wade an effort to She wur a soft thing, that wench, it wur speak once or twice and failed, but at last the words came. women who:u he had helped and cum - forted; there were neglected children whose lives he had contriywp-to brighten there were unbelievers whose setfng his gentle simplicity and long-suffering Itad checked a little. He could be regarded no longer with contempt in Riggin; he even had his friends there. Among those who still mildly jeered at the little' parson stood foremost, far more through vanity than malice, "Owd Sammy" had sauntered down to the miue one day, and was entertaining a group of admirers when (:race went by. It chanced that, for sone menet best known to himself, Sammy. was by- no means in a good humor. Sotnething had gone wrong at home- or abroad, and his grievance had rankled and rendered him feyther's )yin' in the Knoll Iaad, dune abouts were unavailing. On the subject of Liz's flight Joan was ?c:.th. ' A. were ascii iu a moment. Lanterns silent, but it did not remain a secret ed ether necessaries were provided, and many hours. A collier's wife had seen let,:r:u, one of these lanterns herself, Ler standing, crying, and holding a little" .Duan .lett Lha way. bundle on her arm at the corner of a .t s she stepped out on to the pavement lane, and slaving been curious enough to eau was pacing, and attracted by the :aefusion, turned to the crowd. e Wlut is the natter ?" he asked, Titeer's a mon been killed op o' th' - Read," answered one of the colli- er. "It's this lase's feyther. Dan Low- rie .The man streak; into the light and cloacal an agitated face. allue whichivrer way th' wind Mowed "l�ille.f '" he said, "Dan L•.wrie It win Fergus Derrick. H•: rtcugoimed Joan immediately, and went tee her. "Fur pity's sake," he exclaimed, "de !et ge with them. 1f what they say is true. this is n•, place for y •u. Let me take you home: 1-ou wield not-. -" "It wur me," interrupted Joan in a steady voice, " as found him." He could not persuade l el; to remain behind, s, M walked on by her aide. He asked her no .iuesti• ns. He knew enough t•o uneierstarnl tlint his enemy )tars reaped the wlurleind that lie had him- self sown. 1t was he wh'' enol first by the sole of tl.e pr.strate man te•hiing the lantern abr•t'e the elm••st inrec.•.nieatee fan'. Their lie woad ):are raised the lifeless wi' her. I could never see what that Imes o'Leiwrie'■ wanted wi' her. Now she's gotten the choild en her hinds," gle to summon all his strength, he rale - The double 'chock had numbed Joan. ell himself, groping, struck at her with She went about the place, and waited his clenched hand. and failing to reach upon her father in a dull, mechanical 'her, fell forward with his face upon the way. She said but little, to the curious Leel. crowd, who on pretence of being neigh. it was all over when they raised him b.ourly, Hocked to the house. She even and laid him hack again. Joan stoned had very little to say to Anice. Perhaps upright, trembling a little, but other - after all her affection for poor Liz had wise calm - been a stronger one than she had thought. "1 think," 1:race aid gently to Anise, "that she does not exactly need us i "The went agen, tete, did tha 1" he planted. "Dom thee '" and with a strug- CHAPTER XXXIi. yet. I It had 1 all • nr.1nl..air. membered the power he prided himself upon wielding over the weaker sex. He laid aside hie pipe for a moment, and tried sarcasm -an adaptation of ' the same sarcasm he had tried upon the cur- ate. 11'hi,;h .en us said theer wur?" he asked. Joan turned her face, pale with emo- tion, toward him. "Thurc he men here as I would scarce ha' believed could ha' hall much agen him. i see one noon here as has a wife as lay nigh death a month or I. ago, an' it wur the parson as went to see her day after day, an' tuk her help an' comfort. Thet•r's another loon here as had a little tin to dee, an' when it deed, it wur th' lemon as knelt by its Ked an' held it's bond an' talkt to it when it wur feart. Theer's other men as had help from him as they did ns know of, an' it wur help fro' a mon as wur na far fro' s leein' to sen generally expected .hat poor an' hard -worked i' his way as they He etude the rrmerk in the rector's I when out over the cottage upon the presence, end the Reverend Harold did t Knoll Road would lee closed and desert - not sorer with tum•eel, but Poole secret fancy held Jean to the mese. Vedette isolation suited her 1 son a nvinces tit y ee ere mutak- 1 tl en, fusee,' he mart. "Yon are a little Ts": Y' chaps the mere sense of famili- hand, but Jean, who had hent down tow. delicately metaphysical f -'r these' arty gate her comfort. nee- him, stepped hon with a quick • "i should na be lea lrmely anywheer tee lee. You have s•nseive fences* i nee t. shoot them, and they are n•' a senmtive - el*r,' she mid to Anise Barholns, '• Punnet do that," she tells -rd. •and "Theer's more here as i feel near to cissa- w hat they want a g..st .tr. ng it be- he h,rekr'ol uio in surpriP••e he cent- cis" - d.w•tn and a trrfatn .l.•tfrr•e of whops. than i' any other place. 1 ha' pe friends prehdneletl her moaning, even ;t. n,.e she yo' know. Al to th' rhiM, i con carry added in a paai•enite onelestene the Pr•me (nnknesa They meet teaching. •e,._. tit tee Thwaite's wife i' th' trten' when i miser.tt,le wonls- "Ther'e hl•eel on it as might ha' bit your ' sun." "The r s a bottle hers,' sone' enc cried out e,iddenle ".k bottle as 1 just set my fe "' tat. '`hair •her'. been citral tk owe.1, rnnng w,enla D, now Il sr m* to me that this is the tem to rinse her to a g.. to th' pit, an' she'll look after it till Pens., -1 her • her moral rendition. Nle , nett, fee a trifle. She's Merton rhild onght to 1•e r••ns'd, and se ou.ht the ren " her own, and kn••ws theer man. it is a gets, pity that he is un- ; acus.' • st.e ahs went backward and ti.rward conscious.' Of Jown'* stooge eenf,eaton •f (With, night and morning with her little burden Anter• hsd toed hi.'- something ., L, ho. ern:■ Tler rhtld was a frail tiny are i' tbeers. H en dunnot know an' deein' child, em, an if they . fault. Seaforrd.Lr L.Aaui 7.5wy•w '.Ishan*. 11Spm $eafurth ••.17 '• tl.SS " 9.16 " . 3.10 ' Gudlrich.Ar 3.ISpm 9.60tn, 11,00am 7.ltpm , GREAT WESTERN. Esp's 4tlfl. Clinton gutn; north...9.39am 1. m tl.t5pm " Kling mouth.3.0 pym .Malaita .7.24 ' .TACE LINES. l.ucknow Stage (daily) arr 10.1lam riep Ipm Kincardine " " " 10aain . " lam Bri:miller " t'iVo.inesday and Sat urdarl arrives 9.O0un . 11.1 Judge Leuelt'.iet • : '•e St. Louis Crimi- nal Court lea :ea,.., . -ea the bar and newspapers of thitr oo • •" reline as fol- lows in a teenier r:i.,. •:f Hatch gave Reilly 1•eas.'nablt, ..:e ."• i..,lieve that be was eeit,g t•, kilt :lea, Reilly ill law was justitie 1 in lwutine hint' up and kill- ing him, Reilly in law was lea:ttied ill hunting hint up mid killin; him, because the law data not require that a, man shall wait, I. .r Itis opponent inieht meet hint en the street with et double barrel- ed ehotgeqn.". 1t was at first thought - that the Jitd,o had not said exactly what he intended to, or that he was iuc»rrect- ly reported; but in an interview he repeat- ed the language. "This de.ctrine is simply unaeaailable," he said; "the op- posite would subjeet any nun tee atn- stent danger of the assassin's deadly bullet or dagger, attain every case gives to the latter the en:emending advantage. " The (lino-U,rnorret gives the contrary views of a number of judges and law - vers; but, in the meantime, the prisoner in -the case. has profited by gait:nut an acquittal. - RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lu nbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell- ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Paint, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. nn earth equals Sr ',us' Ott a. $ cafe, sure, simple sod cheap [sternalRnn.dy. A trial .orals but lb. rompar.u..ly trifling natiav of 60 Cents, sod .ay on• rota, tot with pals can have cheap and pointy* prod of It. rlatma. Dirorwens In Elev.e Lngnaiss. BOLD BY ILL DRIRIOIST8 IID DElLBU 11 IIEDIQIIE, A. V0GER & 00.. M:ttuiors, Xd., a 1. 4. 1882_ 1Har•per's Bazar. ILLUErr RATED_ Thin papular journal Is a rare combination of literature, art, mil fashion. Its stories, poems. and essays are by the hest writers of Europe and Amerles: Its engravings pose*a the highest artistic excellence: and in all mat- ters pertaining to fashion It In universally ar- knowldsed to be the leading authority in the land. The new t otume will contain many brilliant nos -Otte& R'S PERIODICALS. ver tear! appen th nt..n i speak HARPER'D BAZAR CIO much about th' sick wife HARPER'S MAGAZINE $ 1 000 HARPER'S WEEVILY f On an' what wur .l me for T e THREE above puMlcatloas . Is alive Asy TWR'S one named . .... _ Oli lunnnt, 11 s t?, pats, n a HARPRR$ Vol -HH PEOPLE i .vl A ••why'' broke in ••) ,1 Sammy, "blame ate, if Cha art na turned Meth- ody ! Blame me, ' in amazement, "if tha art na ••Nay,' her face e.,ftenutg;•"it is na Meth•wly ser much. Happen 1 m terntn' woman, fur 1 canna shade t. see a hurt gi'en to there as has ns earned it. That wur why 1 spoke. 1 ha t,,wel yo' th little chep ye' jeered at an for keel his words hack to." Thom it became among her cnmpwtnions ! • commonly accepted Relief that Jean Learn. had Turned lfethodv Theo i11R1'ER'; AG ZINP t O- HARPEH'$ -ot'NU I'EOPI•,, . HARPER'; FRANKLIN NV" AHP; 1.1 RRARY. one year Int Numherse.. 10 00 Pealimpetw * all eabsMe In e trailed Wake or (wads The Volumes oft he Mazar begin with the drat N umber for January of each year ,When ett.1 no time Is inentin It will he iindentto.wl at ththe sabr rtMer wishes to rnmmenre with the Nastier next after the rerelpt of order. The last Twelve .Annn*1 Volumes of HAn- Harms,e taw's Harms, In nat a loth binding. will he .cot hr ma'I, prrtagr pard, ne by erpresw. Mer n1 espen.p rpmo sled the height does not ex- rted one dollar per vnl*mee, for e7 mooch. cloth canna for es. -11 volume. visitable for bindingR, will he sent by mall. postpaid, on re cellp,l of 11(I)carb. tfemtttancee ahnnl.l he made hy Post tine* Money *leder nr Drab, to avoid chance of low Ye...Taper* err ant fn nom /Ai, oehvr, (e ,srwl r.tl,wl (A• rrj,r.aw orris n/ Ilaaraw Reorn own armee.. A 1RPES • SR.TRRt'. • Yet* SEEGMILLER Chill©c? Plow -A\D-- AGRICULTU '' WORKS. Having purchased 11.e G.,derlcb FoaNn 1 a:aliniupp the premises for the trmsevmeeftere of (•HILLI:Ii PLOWS and AGItic t LTURAL IhIPLEMENTS on a l* • scale. 3CIL Work. General Repairing and Jubbicg will be con- tinued. ell work guaranteed. Mr. D. Itunclman is theonly roan authorised to collect payments and Mire receipts ea be- halt e. halt of the late firm ,of IKuneilnan •D Co., sad all persons indeldrd are relocated to govern themselves accordingly. K. SEF:G ttIl.LE1:. 1'm.prletor. hEHI ARRIVALS. CANNED COBS BEEF, LUNCH TONGUE, ENGLISH BRAWN POTTED TONGUE, BEEF, HAM CHICKEN. 14".>:PE53 SALMON AND LOBSTER. A FINE ASSORTMENT OF Christie Brown & Co's BISCUITS AND CA KES, TEAS, SUGARS AHD Pure Spines. TRY THEM. Chas. A. Nairn. ALL THE NEWS FOR A CENT. T11E Torollto Baily Jor1d, THE ONLY G Y1rrCENT MORNING PAPER IN CANADA. THREE DOLLARS -A YEAR ! TWENTY-FIVE CEATS A MONTH!! ONE CENT A COPY ! ! £^.'Leos Ohms Half the teat at am) ..Ther Harahan raper. Yell (• 1 \ M.thl: ISONST by cans aesing for The World. .'.Keats and Canvassers wanted everywhere. Fend post -card for terms and .S L2!PLEl COPY FREE. WORLD PRINTING CO., No. (lel 0.K Mg street east, Toronto. -- - I T k A.L,IS.E kl R RENEWER The crowning glory of men or women is beautiful HEAD 011131R. This can only be ob tained by using l'I\CALEME, which ha, proved itself to be tifie BEST FIbIR ICEITORIE1111 in the market. motes a healthy growth of the hair, renders soft and silky, strengthens its roots, and pr p: vents its falling out, and acts with rapidity RESTORING GREY HAIR - TO. ITS NATURAL COLOR. Try it befor .using any other. Sold by al druggists. IYiere SO eta. a bottle. 17SY.1T- For Sale by J. WilSON. Druggist, AGENTS Wanted. Dig Pay. Ughtt ork. Constant cmploymen for Capital required, Jamie LER A CO. Mo treat. Quebec. 1782 HIRPER'8 YOUNG PEOPLE. A!1 ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY 18 PAGES. St'iTEI) TO BOYS AND/ GIRLS OF FROM SIX TO SiXTEEN YEARS OF AOti. Vol. ai. oomelmSs►eos November 1,181: NOw 1• TUN TIME TO a1 Rat•tIRV_ Tr 'Vol No Port.& has been from the first successful beyond anticipation. A•. 1', Erew- i ap it has a rilatinet purpose to which it steadily adheres that, namely, of supplanting the 71. Ions paprre tor the voting with a paper more attractive, we well as more wholesome. -Boa tow Jnwrwnl Fbr ntatn.w.. el nee of engraving. and contents generally, it Is unsurpassed by any publication of the kind yet broiled to our no- tice. ,'ilfahwrp (#ezrltr. It. weekly • iso. ere eagerly honked for, lint only hy the children, bat akin y parrnta who are ant ions to provide pore literature for their Kirin and boyo. Cavisfrea Adrorate. HufAlo. N. \' A weekly paper for children which parent need not fear to let their rhllAren retail at *It family flrrslde. lferVnrd belay Threw. Jaat the paper to take the inn and Rerun, the attention of the bay s and girls. spr•iav JI .Ll 1'w low. T F R M f3- 1111Rnava lel 4146 ersorsee err Inc. Passage rrewM, i •I. e. Stwota V t rwrw. Pone t ente each. The Hennd ,volume for Dont will he read early In No, emher. Nice 11.1 110; postage pre paid never fnr \'nra•n Paoere for 1111111, :K rents. postage. [t cents additional. Itemtttanee, shonld he made h Poet Odle.*) Money aloe nr L,rwft, to aeon' elianee of loos Nrr.perplrerrra arc not In ropy flea ad.rr7iwr mewl ri/Anwt fAe'rime's order of ii semis R PR. netts. rAurese R ARI'ER 4 RROTHnew ew :�1,t1 iaNMitalf 1bMPi ''lei wittSca S toe.h, tar little and fur h cad � fruit tate � gn,u III*cr Beth. thick buil Gres ture Ft gun Dont hoe one up t lxrt tune the will half and bah flu bee the hot la1' Wr 54,14 a ct ds tur (.n do hot qu Wit ch, on alit sti apt (ct in ea fie pu stn at. we ve tU pa P' nt is , l'I w if ft d it u