HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1882-01-27, Page 60*
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6 THE HURON SIGNAL. FRIDAY, JAN. 27e 1882.
Tlii lass o' Lone's.
A STORY Or Yl tk LAICASHIII COAL MINIM
BT FRANCIS HonosoR BL'alltlsr.
CHAPTER XLITI.
LIZ RITVRtts.
"Miss,'' said Mrs Thwaite, "it wur
last meet, ea' you !nowt ha' knocked me
fr down wi' a feather, fur I wed her as
121 plain as I see yo'."
"Then," said Anice, "she must be, iu
ti Riggan now.
n'
"Ay," the woman answered, "that she
t 'nun, though wheer God knows; I dun -
not. It wur pretty late, yo' see, en' I
W wur gettin' th' mester's supper ready,
• an' as I turns mysen fru' th' master's
• oven, wheer I had boon stoopin' down to
look at th' bit o' bacon, I seed her face
lI agen th' winder, Marin' in at me wild
• loike. Aye, it wur her sure enow, poor
wench ! She wur loike death itaen—
a
f
{
was a low twitter of birds in the air.
The garden Anice had su often tended
was flushing into bloom iu sunny corners
and the breath of early violets was sweet
in it. Derrick was conscious of their
spring time odour as he walked down the
path, in the direction Mrs. Galloway
had pointed out. It was • retired nook
where evergreens were growing, and
when the violet fragrance was more
powerful than anywhere else, for the
x ■patrlette raritasues.
The Ontario l:uternwent has stirred
up the humility of the Tory Press by its
manly determination, as announced iu
the Speech on the opusitio of the Legis-
lature, to defend t., the last the rights ..f
this Province agaiust the encroachments
of the I$unniou Government. When
the possibility of tl.e Macdonald':overu-
went outraging this Province by repudi-
ating the award of the Boundary arbi-
rich, moot with of one bed was blue
tritium was first mooted by the Reform
with them. Juan was standing near press, the idea was scouted as absurd by
these violets --he saw her as he turned their Tory couteuip,raries. Mr. Mere -
into the walk,—a motionless figure in dith, the leader of the 1 ►utario Oppugn -
heavy brown drapery. tion also hastened to disavow all ern -
She heard him and started from her
reverie. With another half-dozen step*
he was at her side.
pathy with such a stove on the part of
his political leader, and recorded his
vote in the Legislature in favor of re -
"Don't look as if I had alarmed you, luting by every lawful means any at -
he said. "It seems such a poor begin- tempt to diepoawas Ontario of what the
ning to .bat I come to say." arbitrators awarded her. But as the
Her hand trembled so that one or two
of the loose violets she held fell at her
feet. She had a cluster of their fragrant
bloom fastened in the full knot of her
early and undefined rumor gained shape
and became au open fact, the views of
the party mouthpiece, underwent a
change, and now we find then boldly
hair. The drooping of the flower declaring in favor of spoliation and de-
train different fro' th' bit o' a soft, seemed to help her to recover herself. pouncing Mr. Mowat for having the
pretty, leet-headed lass she used to be." , She drew back a little, a shade of pride curage to resist the attempted robbery.
"I will go and speak to Mr. Grace," 1 in her gesture, though the Dolour dyed Here is a nice spectacle for sister pro-
Anice said. her cheeks and her eyes were downcast. vincer to gaze upon. A venal press and
The habit of referring to Greco was "I cannot—I cannot listen," she said. an unpatriotic party prepared W eater in
growing stronger every day. She met The slight change which he noted in the' robbery of their own Province,
him not many yards away, and before her speech touched him unutterably.
rather than admit that their party leader
she spoke to hint saw that he was not ig- It was not a very great change. She has been base enough to vent his malice
norant of what she had to say. spoke slowly and uncertainly, and the upon Ontario, by an unwarrantable ex -
"I think you know what I am going quaint northern burr still held its own, excise of authority, and an unjustifiable
to tell you,' she said. and here and there a word betrayed her refusal to recognize its just rights A
"I think I do," was his reply. effort. more degrading exhibition of the depths
The rumor had cuiue to him from au "No, no," he said "you will listen. to which partizanship will drag men has
acquaintance of the Maxrys, and he had You gave me back my lite. You will never before been witnessed than that
toade up his mind to go to them at once. Rot make it worthless. If you cannot furnished by Mr. Meredith and his fol -
"Ay," said the msother,regarding them love me," his voioe shaking, "it would
lowers iu the Ontario Twogislatu•e, and
with rather resentful curiosity, "she wur have been leas cruel W have left me by the Conservative press of the Pro -
here this nornin —Liz wur. She wur where you found me—s dead man --for Circe, in regard to this boundary gees
-
in a bad way snow—said she'd been out whom all pain was over." tion. Small OA their representation in
..0 t',;' t to.ee fou le of o torts- wawa a He stopped. The woman trembled the Pruvinaial Legislature now is, we
•bit out e' her heat. 'A..' mon had left from head to foot. She raised her eyes feel safe in saying that when nett the
her again, as she mopt ha' knowed he from the gr*und and looked at him, electors of Ontario get an opportunity to
would. Ay, lasses is fun's She'd been catching her breath. pronounce upon their acts, it will be still
i' th' Union, too, bad o' th' fever. I "Y0' are *skin' me W be yore wife}" further reduced, if not entirely obliter-
towed her she'd better ha' stayed theer. she said. "Me !' ated. A man or a party that is unable
She wanted W know wheer Joan Lowrie "I love you," he uswered. ''Yeti,' to rine above the trammels of partisan-
wur, an' kept axis fur her till I wur and no other woman !"
tired u' hearin' her, au' Lewd her so." She waited a moment, and then turned
"Did she ask about her little child 7" suddenly away from him. She turned
said Antou to the tree under which they were stand -
"Ay, I think she did, if I remember mg, and leaning against it, resting her
reef. She said summat about wantin' to face upon her arm. Her hand clung
know wheer we'd put it, an' if Joan wur among the ivy leaves and crushed them.
dead, too. But it did na seem to be th' Her old speech comeback in the sudden
choild she cared about so much as Joan "hushed cry she uttered.
Lowrie."I coons turn yo' fro' me." she said.
''Did you tell her where we buried "Oh : I conn, O'
it t" Grace asked. "Thank God ! Thank God t" he said.
.. He would have caught her to his
"Thank you. I will go to the church- I breast, but she held up her hand to re -
yard,", he said to Anice. I may find her strain him.
"Not yet," she said, "not yet. I con -
there." On Sunday, CoL Robert G. Ingersoll
na turn von fro' me, but theer's summat
"Will you let me go too 7" Anise
' attended the funeral of a friend's child
ship in dealing with a question that
effects the rights of the entire community
should receive the unanimous oondemn-
ation of the people.
The people of Ontario, outside of the
party hacks, are a unit in support of the
Ontario Government on this question,
and Mr. Mowat will find his hands
strengthened in any lawful effort he may
make to retain possession of every inch
of soil to which this Province is fairly
entitled. —[Sarnia Observer.
tagereetl's Ides.
asked.
He paused a moment.
"I am afraid that it would be best
that 1 should go alone.
"Let me go," she pleaded. "Don't
bo afraid for me. I could not stay
away. Let me go—for Joan's sake."
So he gave Ivey, and they passed out
together. But they did not find her in
the churchyard. The gate had been
pushed open and hung swinging on its
hinges There were fresh footprints
upon the dainp clay of the path that led
to the corner where the child lay,' and
when they approached the little mound
they saw that something had been
dropped upon the grass near it. It was
a thin, once gay -coloured, little red
Shawl. Auiee bent down and picked i`
up. "She has been here," she said.
It wY Anice who, after this, filet
thought of going to the old cottage upon
the Knoll Road. The afternoon was
waning when they left the churchyard:
when they came within.sight of the cot-
tage the sun had sunk behind the hills,
In the red, wintry light, the place
looked terribly desolate. • Weeds had
sprung up aoout the house, and their
rank growth covered the very threshold,
the shutters hung loose and broken, and
a damp greenness hal crept upon the
stone step.
A chill fell upon her when they stood
;eefore the gate and SAW what wits within.
Something besides the clinging greeu-
neus had crept upon the step, some-
thing human, a homeless creature, who
[night have staggered there and fallen,
or who might have laid herself there to
die. it was Lis. lying with her face
,downward and with her dead hand
against the closed doer.
CHAPTER XLiV n
Mrs Galloway n. and advanced to
meet her visitor with a slightly puzzled
air.
"Mr. she began
"Fergus Derrick," ended the youngg I.
man. "From Riggan madam.""
She held out her hand, enrdiall,.
"Jean is in the garden," she *aid after
a few moments of oonvernntion. "o to
it was • day very different from the
oneoe upon which Jean Leers. hart come
to Ashley Wold. Mprng had set her
light foot fairly upon the green Kentish
sell. Farther north she had only begun
to show her fare tvmufly, brit here the
atmosphereatmsphere was fresh and h&.my, the
w
the * plass 01 rest, pM/e—arta almost
of joy.
There is for thew this co.sulativa:
The deed do not suffer. If they live
again their lives will surely be as good as
ours.
We have no fear: we are all ohildrwn
of the same mother, and the sante isl
e e
awaits us a11. We, too, have our religion
and it is this: Help for the living; hope
for the dead.
I1yUterles of a Lamp of Peal.
Fur years aro one had supposed thtt a
lump of soft oval dug from its mine or
a
bed in the earth, poeseed any other
purpose than that of fuel. It was uezt
found that it would afford a gas which
was combustible. Chemical analysis
proved it to be made of hydogen. In
process of time mechanical loud chemical
ingenuity devised a mode of manufactur-
ing this gas, and applying it to the
lighting of buildings and cities on a wale. ale. Tu doing this, other pro-
ducts of distillation were developed, un-
til, step by step, the following ingred-
ient are extracted from it:—An excell-
ent oil to supply light houses, equal to
the best sperm oil and u lower cost;
bonsai*, a light sort of ethereal fluid
which evaporates easily, and combined use
with vapor or moist air, is d for the
purpose of portable gas Lamps; so-called
naphtha; a heavy fluid to dtasoive gutta
perch* and India rubber; an ezosllent
oil for lubricating purposes; asphaltum,
which u s black, solid substance, used
in melting varnishes, covering roofs and
covering over vaula; paraphme,a white,
ervstalline substance, resembling white
wax, which can be made into beautiful
wax candles. It melts at a temperature
of 110 degrees, a.ol affords an excellent
light. All thesesubstances are now
op
made from soft al.
PrSlsaerRlaakie's eptaea et smR
leetelS.
t teystery explained.
• One of the most learned and dituified
members of the Austin bar got a terrible
rebut[ from Uncle Mow Inst week. The
old man had Juin Webster haute 1 up bo-
rers Justice Orig., for steali,.g his Span-
ish chickens. As Jim Webster loss ;Nilo -
ice' iutluenee, he was defeiiL.l by Iwo
prominent lewyers. Uncle llwe wasput on the *tin 1 :t:III1 sun In out a b ei
case against Jinn Webster, terrifying 111
having found roma of the chickens in
lidos poesessi•ei, .i;11 iuduntiftui; theta
by the peculiarities of the breed.
One pr.ouirwut lawyer thea ua ler-
took to make Uncle Wise wea'Celi on the
orales -examination.
"Now, Uncle Masa," said the Dwyer,,
"suppose that I was to tell yo„ that I
have at home in my yard half a dozen
chickens of that identical same breed 1" bat
"What would I say, s 1"
"Yes, what would you sty if I was to
tell you I've gut that *rota kind of chick-
ens in my yard 1"
"I would say, bow, dat Jim Webster
paid up yer fee wid my chickens,' and a
pensive smile crept around under the
old nun's ears and stet at the t ack of
his head.
Professor Blackie was one .d the speak-
ers at the Brewster-oeutenary festival at
Edinburgh. He said he was not in the
habit of speaking smooth words of dat-
tery to the Scotch people. Be did not
think they were a people who had culti-
vated the beautiful as they should do. They
had the forcible, the fervid, the strong
pushing of their way in the world, but
he did not thiuk they had the beautiful
or the graceful He did not deny that
the Scotch nation, thanks to God, had
produced great artists, and was produc-
ing them, but they had produced great
artists as the Hebrews produced great
prophets. The Jews were a stiff-necked
generation, and therefore the prophets
were sent to correct their stiff-necked-
ness The Scotch, in his opinion, were
a hard-headed, logical, bumptious, util-
itarian, considerably -commercial. pro-
' and vol ar-minded ear le; and
I must ask. Give me thtime to make a g p p
myself worthy—give me tb' time to work
an' stri.e; be patientwith me until
day comes when 1: can come to yo'
know I need not shame you. They
I'm na slow at learning—wait and
how I con work for th' mon—for
mon I love."
THE, IND.
Tie these Live.
th'
an'
ay
see
th'
Home love is the beat love. The love
that you are born to is the sweetest you
will ever have on earth. You who are
so anxious to escape the home nest,
pause a moment and remember that
this is so.
It is right that the hour should come
when you, in your turn, should become
a wife and a mother and give the best
loso to others; but that will be just it.
Nobody—not a lover, not a husband—
will ever oe so tender or so true as
mother and father. Never again, after
strangers have broken the beautiful
bond, will there be anything so sweet as
the little circle of mother, father and
children, where you were cherished,
protected, praised, and kept from harm.
You may not know it now, but you will
know it some day.
Whomsoever you marry, true and
good though he may be, will, after the
lover -days are over and the honeymoon
has waned, give you only what you
deserve of love or sympathy—and us-
ually much less, never more. You must
watch and be wary, lest you lose that
love which came in through the eyes he -
cause they thought you beautiful. But
those who bore you, who loved you
when you were that dreadful little ob-
ject, a small baby, and thought you ex-
quisitely beautiful and wonderfully bril-
liant—they do not care for faces that are
fairer and forms that are more graceful
than yours. You are their very own,
and Ile, better to them always than
.others.
To leave home should be a road, ru t a
glad thing. it should not be so easy to
turn away front the "old folks" and for-
get them, and it seems to be to many.
I have said it once, but i say it again:
There is no love like the love you are
born to, no home like the first home
you knew, if you have good parents,
and that home is that it should he.
When you leave it, you leave your beet
behind you.
Au. ora Daroours now heartily en
dors. the amazing .ucxws of Meilen
Mummy Mannites, and recommend it
for hntk ease in all eases of sexuai weak •
nese Mee advertisement in another
heAge„ erne. heading bravely end thee. rolmmo
in Washington. At the close of the
services at the grave the bereaved moth-
er asked the great orator to say .a few
words, to which,iher a momenta hesita-
tion, he responded thns:
"My friends: I know how vain it is to
gild a grief with words, and yet I wish
to take from every grave its fear. Here
in this world, where life and death are
equal kings, all should be brave enough
to meet what all the dead have met. The
future has been tilled with fear, stained
and polluted bythe heartless past. From
the wondrous tree of life the buds and
blossoms fall with ripened fruit, and in
the common bed of earth patriarchs and
babes sleep side by side. Why should
we fear that which will Cour.' to all that
is? We cannot tell. We Diu not know
which is the greatest blessing. iife or
death. We cannot say that death is not
a good. We do not know whither the
grave is the end of this life or the dolor
of another, or whether the Light here is
not somewhere ease a oiswn. Neither
can we tell which is the more fortunate
—the child dying in its mother's arms
before its lips have learned to him a
word, or he who journeys all the
length of life's uneven road, painfully
taking the last slow steps with staff and
crutch.
Every crude asks us "whence" and
every coffin "whither'" The poor bar-
barian weeping alts 'it his dead can an-
swer the yuestton as intelligently ani
satisfactorily as the robed priests of the
most authentic creed. The tearful ig-
norance of the one is just as consoling as
the learned and unmeaning words of the
other. N. ,ran standing where the Lori -
son .of life has touched the grave has any
right to prophesy a future filled with
pain and tears. it may be that loath
gives all there us of worth to life if
those who press and strain against our
hearts could never die, perhaps that
love would wither from the earth. May-
be a common faith treads from .out the
paths between our hearts the weeds of
selfishness and hate, and i should rather
live and love when death is king
than have eternal life and love is n•.t
Another life to naught unless we know
and love again the ones who love us
hers.
They who stand with breaking hearts
around this little grave need have n
fear. The large and the noble faith in
all that is, and is to be, tells as that
death even at its worst is only perfect
rest. We know that through the com-
mon wants of life—the needs and duties
of each hour -their grief will Isle. day
:,v day until tt last this (mare wdl he I.
Lime Mach.
LuuuL.ugo, Kidney complaint, Nen-
raliIut, Itheutt;atirun, and all paiu and in-
tlawatool. sou speedily cured with Hag-
yard'r l eft... 4 h1, Croup, sore throat,
colds, barns, oxide, bruises, font bites,
ehilblaus A11.1..
.1 ,: wounds of the desh are
quickly healed ray Yellow Oil. ;2)
PRICES REDUCED PIM lice•'
Blackwood and the Four Reviews
ON LZ S1O-
't'lll': Itri ltd\T-1 uh' THE
Fear Leading Quarterly Reviews,
MI /.MINI MGM REVIEW 1 n'A(pr.
TUI NCAT ttINsTRR ROvtew ll. berui4.
TSR LP%De\ Ill \RTti*LY RIt71RW Icon
eereafi or).
TU RRITtsU Yt ►Rr►Rtr 1111111111W
(Evangelical).
AND
Blackwood's Edinbuf h Magine,
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Te=i1o1 Nita feet Ibrt.dltig rWlag d;
Payable Strictly in Adman.
For any one Review 43 50 per annum
For any two Itevtews 1 Se •'
icor any three Reviews. . e M " ..
Yoe all four Reviews
Tor Blackwood** Magasthe.. 3 00
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For Blackwood toad two Re-
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For Blackwood sad three Re-
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Singh. number of Blackwood. M oe•tnt
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LEONAD SCOTT PUBLISHING CO.
ei RAN1'LAT ST.. NM ROOM
17Ht.
\H esu. Nwgalass•6E311
New heartily ew:o co- the amazing sue-
ores of Mack's Mag...: ie Meducine. and
r'eoomtnead it for i.•:.c sexes in all oars
of sexual weakuaes. .w advertisement
in another column, atild in Godeeiob
by Jas Wilton, druggist, lm
God had sent to them Sir t1'alter Scott
and thew artists to lift them to a higher
platform of existence. Because if the
Supreme Being had manifested His ex-
cellence in all the various forms of beau-
ty in creation to despise the beautiful
and only talk of the useful? For what?
To fill their pockets with hard cash ?
Pshaw! Utility was only a step to some-
thing higher; and if they did sot worship
the true, and the beautiful, and the good
for their own sake, then, with all their
newspapers, and all their gas lights, and
telegraphs, and all their logic and Will- 1
osophy, they would be weighed like dust
in a balance—they would be nothing at
a:l, at all. The highest thing was W be
constantly inspired by reference for the
-beautiful and sublime in God and -nature.
One fact ty show how low they were.
His father lent hint to Rome when he
was one -and -twenty, and there he fell in
love with all the beautiful forms in an
tion i y - with the Venus de Medici, with
Apollo. and the dancing nymphs; and
when he carne home he thouight he would
be a professor in Greek or Latin in some
Scotch university and by a Whig job he
got it. But what did he do? With all
his learning he found nod a single thing
was required. Nobody wanted it. The
perfe:tion of human nature was to un•
derstand qui, Tice, good, and the highest
culture to write a L+tin sentence without
a grammatical error, or spell a bit of
Horner or Horace. He hoped that Prof.
Brown, in the fine arts chair, would do
something to -make the arts appreciated
even by the betty, pedantic. elementary
elegies of their wretchedtc,tch Universi•
ties. Laughter and applause.'
Rbe.estte Mootedy.
There as no better cure for Rheumat-
ism than Hacyard s Yellow Oil used ac-
cording t o directions on the bottle. It
also cures Burns Scalds, Frost Bites,
Bruises, lameness, and all wounds of
the flesh. All dealer* w1I it, price 25
Icents.
Da Luton, of 1ihro, surgeon in the
army during the war. from expnure
contracted cemmutnpttnn. He mays in •
letter addreatad to Mean. J N Harris
at G.. pn,prietors of Ausw's Lt•wo Bat
as., i have no hesitancy ,n stating that
it was by the use of your Lung Ralston
1 that i am now alive and enjeytng good
, health
• .hese t 41.. up /lo alep,"
Were the memorable words of Cowimo
dare Perry YA a repeat. "Don't Give
up the Ship. poor. despairing invalid.
but try Rardnok lend Raters it Sure
others. why not you t it nwirentes, re
vilate and tones ►11 the organs of se-
rretenn end restores 1-,st Vitality 'Y
IroB
RHEUMATISM,
heraltia, Sciatica, Lu.wba o,
Backache, Soreness of the Chest,
Gout, Quinsy, Son Throat, Swell-
ings and Sprains, Burns and
Scalds, General Bodily
Pains,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Feet and fan, and all other
Pains and Aches.
No ?reparation oe Garth meals er. J.mss oft
ss s safe, sure, Simple sad cbe.p Eu.re.1
Isw.dy. A trial tootle bet the comparatively
trilling outlay of to Ceuta, slid every one wider -
fag .Ith rain can he.. cheep and pain.e prwt
of Its claims.
Direction le ne..e tangnag.s.
SOLD BY ALL DRU(H1I8TS LND DEALEM
IB MEDICINE
A. VOGEIAEii. st co..
Baltimore, Md., U. e. L.
St. Catheriiles Nurseries.
[4:34;
If Acing fully tees'
MOORE'S EARLY & BRIGHTON
two new grapes, i unhesitatingly advise my
patrons to plant them. You will sot be dis-
appointed. MOORE'S EARLY Is this beet
very early black grape yet grown In Canada.
It has stood thirty degrees below zero unbnrt.
BRIGHTON Is a delicious rod grape, ripening
„lust atter Moore's Early. They are both large
a bunch and berry, and very productive. I
will mall both to any address, postpaid, on
receipt 01E2. or either for $1. Agents wanted.
D. W. BEADLE
•
ST. CATHaajscso, Olrr.
191111m.
1882_
Harper's Bazar.
ZLLTJBTR.ATFD_
This popular journal Is a rare combination
of literature, art, and fashion. Its stories
poems, and essays are by the best writers of
Europe and America; la engravings
the A artistic excellence ; and in *II' I mast
mat-
ters pertalnlne to fashion It Is nnivereally ac•
knowledged to be the leading authority in the
land. The new volume will contain many
brilliant novelties.
HARPER'S PERIODICALS.
Per tear
HARPER'S BAZAR II 1 M
HARPER'e MAO AZi i
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The THREE above publications .,., 10 et
Any TWO abo.e satned
MARF•Eft' YOUNG PEOPLE "". 7 M
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HARPER v YOUNG PiOPLE ,
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BRA It Y. 011117116, 132 Numberst.. 10 00
J►r 0s sift sueser(hers fa Me Vetted
Rrettee err
The Volume( the Rasa. begin with the
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a trate. la arcade elWhim
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rt.tact Twed.a Avineri Vaoit,trrw. of Hal►
raw. is neat sding, will be
seat mow 1 vldei ',by 1 evoldoes no fres
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ARRIYALZ.
CANNED
CORN BEEF,
LUNCH TONGUE,
. ENGLISH BRAWN
POTTED
TONGUE,
BEEF,
HAM
CHICKEN.
FRESH
SALMON AND LOBSTER.
A FINE ASSORTMENT
PF
Christie Brown & Co's
BISCUITS um
CAKES,
TEAS,
SUGARS 'on
Pure Spines.
TRY THEM.
Chas. A. Nairn.
ALL THE NEWS FO A CECT.
THF
Torollto Daily forli,
THE ON 1' ONE-CE.N'T NOR NI NU
PIPER IN CANADA.
T HEE DOLLARS A YEA
TWENTY-FIVE CEATS AIMONTH!!
ONE CENT A COPY ! !
LarLe.t than Ralf the t est et say ether
%vetoing raper. - -
101 II IN N 1k0 MO%ET by canvassing dot
The World. Agents and Canvassers wanted
everywhere. Send post—card for terms and
SANPLEI ('OPE FREE.
WORLD PRINTING CO.,
No. 414100.King street Last. Toronto.
CINGALESE
HAIR RENEWER
The crowning gory of men or women is
besutlfnl HEAD or HAIR. This an only be oh
tained by using s'IN4ALEAR. which ha'
proved Itself to he the BFBT HAIR
11- FBTORFR In the market.
motes • healthy growth of the hair, renders
soft and silky. strengthens its roots. and pr 11
vena ita falling out. and nets with rapidity
RESTORING GREY HAIR
TO ITS NATURAL COLOR.
Try it befor ,ueing any other. Sold hy al
druggists. Priem.. 30 ca. a bottle. 1752.1y.
For Sale by J. WILSON, Druggist,
1888.
HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE,
AN ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY 11 PAGES.
SUiTED TO BOYS AND GIRLS OF FROM
8iX TO SiXTEEEN YEARS OT AOI.
VOL SII. oemmenoa )Tovember 1r 1 ''
Now 15 Toa TlMR TO arlsar41$t.
Te Tot,NO Pgnrta has been from the nkat
successful beyond anticipation.- N. Y. Snw-
iap Post.
it has a distinct purpose to which It st.sdily
adheres that, namely, of supplanting the vitt
foul papers for the young with a paper snore
attractive, as well as more wholesome. --Ros-
ton Journal.
For neatness, .1 nee of engraving and
coOt.na generally, It in uneurpseeed by any
pwblidtInn of the kind yet brought to our ne
bee.-Pittabwup Oasett,
Itsweekly visite are eagrrly looked tor. Oe,
only by the cblldr.a, but oleo by parents who
WO sax loot to provide per, !iterative few their
gttleYsed boys - C*,(Mront
taa Adb, Halllto.
N .
A weekly paper for children which parer'
seed not fear to lel their ehlldree read at th
fetidly ereetd. Har(Jhrd /bur noun.
Just 15. paper tiara the ey. and Decor.
the attention Asid Osten. the
hors and girls. iip+twp
-g T�R- ]t
iliMw re.u, rOMS iee.sm.
Nwow Notsl..s abet Cama reel[,
T1s Bowed scares for 1141 will be rel
arty IO Novesnbsr. Prtn. $1.00
— Lever fbr Tot fro Pon,,.. ter
nenb; 13 sere addtticeol.
Row tta.nr..ho0d be mad. its Peet -011e e
Money Order re Pratt, to avoid etas.* of Iola
Nelaspasrro end to eopr tads aigeneletie
wool s�slhoot esprses seder eJ Hamm.
Plarreltillgto
YddP'R
•
ress. HARR A $ROTHtRa, Maw
•I.M.