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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1884-12-5, Page 31 )• 1 is. THE HURON SIGNAL FRIDAY. DEC. 5e 1884. 3 • 1 Cntrorcrsy pith Citi. 'Ionil. wretch ! 1 bate him. We hare newer had a eminent's peace owe be took p.--.- ea of this boors,' declared Pally Palates, with a stamp et tee tout. Th. 'he' referred to was wit, as might be supposed, a tramp ur a sheriff . °Aieer net even a pour ret•twn, or an Irish butler, ur • boohoo Chiause. Not at all. The object of Polly's wrath was • per- sowage lifted up, M it wallet seem, by genus sit his position, above homes mit- ran as above human rules, a myth, as sukuown entity -Do other, in feet, than the little gad Cupid himself. He and quite undisceuraged by I'ully's dismayed Baa Cupid ears 1 O•rtain it is that matters grew worse rather than better ger Pully trout that day forward. Fsany Allen carne, and in due time bee lover, s.eordiuq to potgreuume, and with il•e let er a omeia, Mr. tkbuiet Oliphant, • successful merchant, just hums frog China fur • brief visit. Ha return was nut perely for business purposes. Mr. Oliphant was on the Leak out for a wife ; and with a prompt decision of a mercan- tile man, he elected Pully Patten for that position on a two day. acquaint- ance. A firm believer in the faith that 'taint heart never wet fair lady,' and 'nothing vesture, nothing have,' he of- fered himself at the sod of the week, and his machinations had of late wrought changes -woeful ones Pully thought --in the constitution of the fatten family ; ani to her iwagioatiot rcpremoted all ilsanner of discomfort and duoumbture, 'no,' sat resolutely down said traced his parallels ren.lved to gain by siege what he had failed to win at a coag by assault. This contplicatiuu set the seal to Polly's disounteuts. whits► wits all that tine made peasi. Tele b Atone mss` We, Seem (inner% her use special Take may avec., girls, and dua't marry friend, galled ens swine. end with a buret of emotion quite ea waresated its the staid See, scudded the fact that she was engaged --engaged to O. O., whot was the loveliest, dearest area that ever was, boys. While you are st beim. or al work. or whatever way employe, don't reoeve tb atteotlon* of boys of your own age ox yosncer. Look oat lot a husband some eeveu or eight, or ten or thotyth Polly bad been a. aaktnd as act twenty years older tbu you are. Get to find it out - • feet she (clue) was very masa ono to take atm of you Joel, glad of now-aud they were to be mar encumber yourselves with hoserhold nod in six weeks, and sail for China di- mores, mamma, babies and a btaband mil reedy afterward. Aod would her dear- est Pully forgive her, and premise to low, O. 0., all she puseibly could, just for her sake 1 'You, too ' was all Polly's reply. But she put her arms round due's neck with a tear end a sob, and all was sineveh be- tween titan. Sue, who dreaded the in- terview, was amazed at Pully's forbear- snse. A change bad evidently come over the spirit of her dream. Trials, we are told, hare a chastening effete on the the alteration of plans, the blight of .For just imagine what a 'tate of character. Was it her trials which ware h°10105-Issovatiul sad cress Purpow s thieve it makers,' she told her confidante Ulm blessed to Pully ? without end. Mb. felt toward him a Sue. 'There they sit --the three seta of Atter that all was bewilderment and gored, hottest, hearty hostility, as cue uiunies - one in the parlor, ow in the confusion dim till the two weddings were may toward an oppuoeat of flesh end dining room, um in the 'den' from which over. Eun:ee and John departed the blood. as she sat in her bedru.om, in- poor papa is turned out bag and baggage; day after theirs, and a lull fell upon the trenching upon the subject to ber sloecial and there is that abominable O' O ' weary household. Mrs. Patten went up friend Susan Gilmore, ■ho was perched (never did nlan have such suitable ini- stain to lie down. Polly, who sighed beside her un the broad window -sill' tuls,loxxninit like divan or • thunder 'Ole, it's all very well to l'ngh,' she storm all day long, determined t•o get me went on, 'but jest wait tad you try it by myself, and 'cultivate my acquaint - yourself. All tact year wsagtven up, you a ' How am he make ore care for know, to marrying Helen, Her 'sous - sees, her presents, aud her furnishing -- nothing else was thought of er 'pekoe of fur twelve long m..rtthe The house was choked with her things. We ail worked our fingers to the bona, Nobody could torsi round without finding a woman and s see iu,-wachine at his back- We never even pretend t.. bear ourselves speak. Well, just as it was all over, and Helen coetturtably off our mi;ads, Lizzie must needs tet up a liver atl a long engage- ment- -John Shaw, too, of all persons 1 at the state time. Iyua't be so ambitions. Cumasenoe on a smaller scala Say housekeeping and babies, and have the husband to take care of you. You will tied that quite as much s. you are equal to. I know girls aro ambitious, but they sometimes take more on themselves than they &rawate of. Duu't tske a husband to educate ; by the time be aud you arae forty, he is • hale, hearty man in the prime of lite, and everybody is saying bow young and handsome :he looks ; what a young•luoktng husband you have how smart he is ; why, is that young man your husband 1 Nobody says that you look young. For why 1 You are all brute up ; your back .. lame, got a pain in your side, hair getting 'tray, blind as a bat. Why, you aro completely worn for fresh air, departed for a walk with out taking caro of him and his eight or ten children. This last fifteen years has John Gihn.,ro, who missed hLa sister r. made an old woman of you, while your much, poor fellow 1 and Amy, the ceJr!tr husband has only just gut able to think of the family, prepared to celebrate their for himself, without your doing that as him he says, if he never has rhe chance newly recovered freedom by adorning well as •million other things for him. Ten to one he will now begin to give you the same information that you have been trying to din into his ears this last dozen years. So, girls, take my advice+; just think what a young man it, of 22- a mere child. Let him alone a few years don't heed his soft speeches. Hs is just at the age to go headlong into some busi- ness he does not understand, eight or ten years later he will know that for him- self. Let him make a home and then marry. So, girls, be wise in your youth, and don't be in a hurry W marry, and when you do, get • man to take care of you, not a boy for you to take care of. Ask a mother or sister what a son or brother is between 20 and 25. Why, they will tell you that he is the most catankerous thing in existence. Why, a boy does not begin to understand until he 1. well on to 30. Now, girls, I sup- pose you won't believe that, but it is quite true. Nor will the young men be- lieve it until they understand, and they know what they have been,and sheepish- ly look back at the narrow escape they have had. So, girls, take the advice of your Aunt Katy. to see me alone 1 As if I wanted to see and making beautiful the diningruom, him ,r care fur him either ! It is the now rescued from courting purposes, and neat euth•rrassii.g, abominable condi- restored again to the common use of the tion of affairs. I seriously meditate run- household. wing away to teach scheui-or something. Home is growing unbearable.' 'Why do you diali.te bir. l►liphant to much ' He seam to ire very pleas- ant-' 'Sue ' When he teases the life out of me ' i declare aro :s blushing. Are you ter g traitor eel 1 Now 1 may be dull, but, in tree name of Not in the "mat -I dont know what common-sense, why John Shaw. of all you mean, firat is. What I wanted to room sere meant fur only two, and for men in the world i tell you was that we're going to have a no one else. It was dusk when she fin - knows, I pmumc." young man of our own also. My broth- Shed, and curling up in the sots corner, provoking. Every morning of his 111. 'Well, perhaps site dots ; mil), it u er J.ock is c.ming homy neat week.' she awaited with impatience Yully's re - .How coherent'. I declare. Sue, 700 turn ---folly who had hated the love - John Shaw looks in for haat an hour on mala we suspect something. Jack 'He's making as much as she had, and sou:d his way down town. He and Lizziesothe one who's been so long in Germany. be se plowed ' Polly was the one person absorb the parlor, of course. That is $.1 in the house of whose sympathy Amy Well, I hope you'll enjoy him ; but pray right, no doubt ; but, as it happens, thatfelt quite scut• particular half hour is precisely the one keep him to yourselves, I've had enoughtelt was long in coming, but she came which I used always to take to tidy up the flowers, water and true, fill the rases, and make the room nice for the day, and the want of it puts me out dreadfully. 1 sit and twirl ntv thumb., and scold to mother, and she never will agree with me. 'Loren are pnvilegeu,' she says.' 'Of course they are. Dunt be a spoil- sport, Polly. It's their turn now. Yours will come.' 'Never' But there's more behind. What do you say to Eunice's indulging in an eegageasent too r 'tint really r 'Very really indeed. John Norman is tt.e happy man this time. Two t,,hns, you observe, by way of making the aom- .:aion greater. So they sit in the dining mom every evening, while Liam and her i Another fortuiglit passed. Cousin John occupy the parlor.' Fanny and berflencc went away, but O. 'And where do the rest of you sit '' U. still lingered. Fully gave an excla- 'Echo answers. We sit whereever we tnation of despairing disgust when .he may. Mother takes her mending-baaket up stairs, and has a student -lamp on the round table in the upper entry. Papa shute himself op .n that dreadful little close 'den' of his. or goes to the °Bice. 1 observe that he has business there of evenings much oftener than formerly of him often at the Gilmores,' She saw because there is no comfortable place for little of Sue in ilia.. days; Sue was oc- him at home, no doubt. Jim takes a cupied with her brother, just returned point of being out. Aa for Amy and me, after his hong absence. Mindful of we sit un the back stairs, or in the Polly's interdict. perhaps she was in no butler's pantry. or any other odd corner haste to present him to her fnend-a fact which nobody else wants.' Fully laugh- l which Polly was disposed to resett,when ed, but there were tears in her brown la full week after his arrival, she was at eyes, and very ioutin.•us look about last brought face to face with him. She the pretty mouth, which John Normon, while in process of 'sampling the family' to borrow Polly's own phrase, had ones likened to beautiful Evelyn Hope's, of tree 'geranium A busy afternoon indeed did little Amy make for herself, but it was a merry one, and she sang as she worked. Every vase in the room she filled with violets and wild flowers, or apple blooms from the just blossomed orchard. The curtains were pulled to. exactly the ideal angle, the chain regrouped. all the horrid look takeh away. Amy thought, as ii the of young men, Johns especially. I never want to see one again u long as I live - 1 atr.k. Gracious ! there's that tiro - some O. 0., strolling up and duwn in Leptis of catching me as 1 come out. I declare it is unendurable. Good-bye, Sue. I'... going home by the back door, if you don't mind.' And catching up her bonnet, Polly vanished, while Sean came down ; .here was a long confabbing Gilmore, with a guilty look in her eyes, in the entry ;but at last the front dour and s pair of red, red cheeks, tied hen shot with a delightful emphasis, and issuiissuingnn, and issuing sedately from the front Amy jumped up from the sofa to enjoy d'e'r, encountered Mr. Oliphant, and the effect of her surprise. presently, under his escort, walked rep` 'Colne in -oh, do come in '' she cried. the street. `After all.' she thought t to 'I want you to see if the dear old room herself. 'if Pully canbint t like hi, and doesn't lout lovely. I've been all the doesn't want him, why not r Why nut, afternoon doing it so that it might be indeed t It was unanswerable. nice for ,our first evening. Isn't it pleas- ant to hare a roam to sit in &stain 1 Aren't you glad that the wedding is over, and all the tiresome Icre-making, and we an have cosy little times at home like other people 1 Why, Polly, how queer you look' Don't you like it 1 What makes you do so ?' --far Pully, half tearfully, was kissing and fondling the child. 'Oh, 1 do. Amy darling, I do Tike it very much,' pleaded pcor Polly, 'but - only -my pet, I'm afraid you'll be very disappointed ; but John Gilmore u here com- ing hethio evening to see me, and I'm afraid I'll have to ask you to let us have this room.' 'John Gilmore ' Good Gracious' Polly Patten' -with almost a shriek --'you're not engaged to him 1 You don't mew that ''' 'Y -a -e -s, faltered Pclly. '011, Amy dear, don't look so iiatreesed ' 'i will look distressed ; I have a right to.' cried Amy, with • burst of soba red 'After all you said ! A man named John, 'Mr all this wasn't enough,' went1 altogether very 'nice.' What • myriad leo-these Johns •in the [amity ' Oh, oa pwfigotly ; with a hal[ giggle, hal[ 1 of diverse meanings may be included in Polly' And you who declared yon'hat- eob, 'hers is a letter come today frogs lin that word, beloved of girls, 'nice''ed men roamed John ! Well, after this, Fanny Allen- our cousin, you know- 1 In John Gilmori s nese it meant that I never, never will believe in anybody she is angered, too ; and she pro- he did not talk nonsense to Polly, and i again.' Pram to make us a. visit. aad her yowl( yet • that he seemed to like the nonsense I Amy deer, 1 tolled a greet deal of emu means to 'drop along,' forsooth, she talked : at least he brightened ender nonsense You most forget it. i didn't while she is here. Now, where are they it always, and it mace him laugh. He know.' Bnt Pully urged in vain. Amy to sit 1 i can't imagine, unless they take never bored her with sense ani long •x- know: her hued Beide, and rushed away the air -chamber of the furnace. The planation, but she was never in his arm- to meddle herself as bete she might with front steps are quite too add at this time I pony without finding herself afterward t con offiof crying, and PoUy,oeotiviwith of the year. Or 1 might have the trunk- ,thinking about things which he had said, repentant, but by no means nnhsppy, room cleared out for them . 1 hadn't I and looking up little points of informs. wlett tno'hind. thought of that bete-- ' I tion suggested by his talk Hc wee au at last. Amy beard her step on the porch, and with it another step, louder, firmer. Surely that tiresome John Gil- more was not coming in to spoil every- thing this first pleasant night. No ; he be had come to see papa Amy heard him tap at the door uf the 'den,' while Polly ran 0(1 stain. He emerged as she learned his intention : but, after all. he did not prove the nuisance she had fear. ed. He had other friends in turn by this time, ether engagements, and did not haunt the Fattens' house every day, and all day long, as at tint. Polly heard liked John Gilmore at once. He was quite different from all the other Johns, and nct at all formidable, Polly thought -tall and spare. quiet in speech and shy in manner, weariest soeetaeles ton, bat OCKINTIENG KUM& t.esesa 11110 1111111 beg' M e I.ewstaaaa see eeeelMbeae et Twos, a say.. Perhaps of ail astioea in the world the French are most given te the practice of staWtims, and in darryang tt out they take into consideration all meaner uf subjects which never enter the militia of other people. As a case in punt it is narrated of • Frenchman she recently died, that en his wedding day, twenty years ago, he took the resolution of keep- ing a eepinga yearly record of the number if kisses exchanged with bis wife until their union became severed by death of one or the (Aber. He was destined to be the first to go, but when on his sack bed, foreseeing that he would not re- ouver, he begged • friend to let as world know the result of his twenty years of account keeping. During the first year of weeded life the kisses ex- changed reached the colossal figure • f 30,500, or on an average 100 • day. but in the following twelvemonths there wta a notable decrease. not more than 16,0(0 being inscribed on his registry ; whilst tLe third year shows • still greater fall- ing off, the average number of kisses being but ten • day. After a lapse of five years a furthtr reduction is recorded, and the account- keepers's task was simplified, for only two kisses were exchanged during each twenty-four hours -one in the morning on rising, and the other on retiring to rest. Later on, during the last ten years of his married life, they only kissed each other on leaning for or returoing from a journey, and he had hence very little trouble in making up his annual dumestic statistics. Now there was possibly very little diminution of affection notwith- standing this ominous looking record ; it goes mere to prove that the duces arose from the growth of familiarity rather than from estrangement. Take the caw of a mans children as an exam- ple ; he fondles and kisses an infant much more than he does the ane child as it increases in growth ; but who can ay that his affection is less for a daugl.ter in the ripeness of woen•t.hood than it was for her when lying in her cradle half or wholly unconscious of his love ? Ten goer Wile. Puree vat the larking distemper list en•brutui.s health. &tea the mostIIatiMPINll vtg,r will return Those who maw bee all enfeebled and diserd.rwl state of the sydsm, should take Ayer'a tiarsapesWa to el .anus the bl.w.d awl restore vitality. Paor. Low .4 11 tore St LPIII a Soar. Healing. eouthint and cleansing fee all eruptive dimmer of the skin. I)ehig:tidal for toilet use. lin Advice is cheap, you know, and men of alt created beings like it the least. But what if it proves a matter of dollar and cents 1 You all like money and appreciate its importance as a factor of the happy home. So if we tell you how every man of you who has Dever tried the es eriment can ave from 15 to 25 per cent. of his expenses during the coming year, you will probably listen. Now that is just what we mean to do. it is easy and simple and sure to work. Just tell your wife all about your busi- ness affairs. Show her your balance sheet, let her study it, and if she doesn't know how, just teeth her. You think it will make her feel badly: that it will make her blue. Well, that 1 will depend entirely on the way in which you do it. If you begin by declaring that there is not another family that runs such bills as yours, and that there s'more money spent fur the leant show bunt that house than an other lace —_--- — weu is terseaber. A stitch in time -saves nine. Serious results oft follow • neglect of cunsttpated bowels and bad blood. Burdo„k Blood Bitten regulate and purify the stomach, bowels, liver, kidneys and the blood. Take it in time. brakeman-- s A brakeman named John Fraser had his right hand badly injured at Bruce field while coupling cars one day last week. The cause of the accident was a wet glove which froze to the iron and prevented his hand being withdrawn in time. He waa attended by the company's physician, Dr. Hyndtoan, of Exeter. who amputated the forefinger. a y p you can find, she will feel hurt, and if she has not had all the spirit taken out of her by your unfair treatment she will resent it a dozen times a day, till you confess that you Vire played the bully and the fool. But, on the other hand,if yr,u approach her u if she were an intelligent being, with soul and sense and self-respect Neal to your own, you will find an in- terested listener, willing and anxious to learn all that you can teach her on the subject of family finances, and although she may dc a little quiet weeping before the interview is ended, they will be Heneen's Sexes is the only paper to the =silt � iciest c.ebtaes the choicest Hieratuue tears of joy she sheds, that at last, after • Ifs gaeat art Wsetrstteas wwh lbs tatsist years of waiting and hoping, you have fashllts. sad methods or household .dors- .se to realise that .he is your friend and may be your hel`er, instead of the child, lilt• which you have treated ber by shutting up like an nyder when she ventured to ask a question any ways relevant to business matters, and stud• ioasly avoiding in conversation every- thing connected with that great mystery. Polly, you aro ridicuious Ynnr *Min kind-hearted, tow - always so kind ! Ho So ended Polly s controversy with How often do we hear of the'. madden fatal termination of a case of croap,when a young life might have been saved by the prompt use of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. Be wise in time, and keep a bottle of it on hand, ready for instant use. will manage all that for bereetf-est if i didn't sneer at her diatribes against love Cupid. She era vanga obed, as Pollee she doesn't. They will take walks, or lane lovers and he seemed to andet• are apt to be in such Miriam ; but there something.' stand and be • little sorry for her left are defeats which count for more than 'Oh, if they only emelt' ' if the whn le out in the cold. solitary in the midst o( victoria, at w• all know, and this may lot of them would 'take walks,' and keep 1 the sitt•rty circle noes so one in interest have been ma I regret to say that she on walking, and Dever walk the way,' and so elnesly united. Here was a yeas - how comfortable it would be ! Sae, you I im• friend at last, she retested -a 'rimed are abominably Wessel about .soh 1 of lin own ; and comforted thereby for eamtteea That misavable Cupid 1 1 wish her losese,abe grew a little more tolerant I of the happi a t. of other people : and eves when, a little later, a great ware of surprises and sodden changes broke over the home and all in it, still the tolerance emit is toed. !ot, first. John Korman had a part- wwabip o(.v.d him in Smith Agseviea, sad he sad Mirada W tow get reedy 1 et twit totttltlli Isles to Bail to their MA MM. And while Pay wee 1.414n over the Martel preptlildiedi t mead hold hie wings in the candle sad Item tams ot. no never flies but to do nchief ermewher•. How peaeelsl sad I i hem we all were together before the nett of thug begirt.' 'lbke ears ; he will hear yea, god his St the I bmiieve him to M oke erigiwal 'Yttla pits►ac with long 411111114. " 1 AmnY eery it he Aima bar tae.' s► Arcata Pony, deneaty. .KING'S EVIL ill Was the name formerly given to Scrofula because of a superstition that It could be i cured by a kinea touch. Th.: world is wiser now, and linter, that SCROFi'LA can only be cured by a thorough purf6ts tion of the blood. If this is u.ilected, the dimes perpetuates tea taint through geserstlon atter generation. Among Its eerier symFtom tfe dh•vrlopwcntu are Eeaaw'. Cutaneous Erappttona, 1 *. a�. eihis Carbuncle*. Krydd.. pa dant Ulcera, Nervous and Pixy - deed Collapse. etc. If allowed to coo - these, fitheamatiess. Scrofulous Cap teetheKidney sad Liver Dise ,, Tabsrewlar •sumptlos, aal vari- t etherpraised or fatal maladies, are by The Tree Friend. Wanted a frilled. One who will re- cognize me when I tin compelled to sear patched breeches ; whn will take me by the hand when I am sliding down hill, instead of giving ma a kick to hasten my descent ; who will lend me a shilling without requiriag twenty shilling's worth of security; who will come to see me when I am sick ; who will pull off hi. emit and fight for me when the odds are two to one; who will talk of me behind my back as he talks to my face. Such a friend is wanted by ten thousand time ten thous- and human beings throughout this brad earth. • ram is the common and well known Bur- dock. It is one ot the best blood purifi- ers and kidney regulators in the vegetable world, and the compound known as Burdock Blood Bitters possess wonder- ful power in diseases of the blood, liver, KRale Ylvewv.. 1 - l Ayer's Sarsaparilla b the only powerful and always reliable bleod-yourOisp medicine. It Lao ellen- nal en alterative that it eradicates trout the system Hereditary Serotala, and the kttdrsd poisons ot contagious diseases trod mercury. At the same time It ell. rices and vitalizes the blood, restortot Malaita action to the vital organs tai rejuvenate the entire system. Tb1agn.* Regenerative nedicins Ia composed of the genuine Ho*dvrrs Sersoparill0. with FeUote Dock, Sta- linyia, the Iodides cy Potassium sad Iron. sad l r i or pis - Its careful and eoss- Its ornate la generally kaswa =Medical prone**. sad the best pphysiolans constantly pesattlbe AYaa'e 13sansPaau.lr as ac Absolute Cure 4 kidneys and atomaels. 2 For all cinema caused by the ettlatlon of the bloat. It is concentrated to the high- est practicable degree, tar beyond any ether preparation for which like effects are claimed, and is therefore the cheapest. u well ss the best blood purifying medi- cine, in the world. Ayer's Sarsaparilla PREPARED BY Dr J. C. Ajar 1 Co., Locate/, /ata. (Analytical Chemists.] Sold by all Druggists : price $1; six bottles for 0. 1885_ llrjr'sYoaugPeopla LN ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY. The eerie and abort stories 1n bane els Yoe,u Puerta have all the dramatic that juvenile action can possess while the are wholly tree from wbat is pernicious f vulgarly sensational. The humorous emit w' and pictures sa full of Innocent fun. ad tt. papers on natural history and science_ used and the facts of 1it«. &.e by writers wbe� names give the best assurance olaoruracy Md value. Illustrated papers on athlete WWerte% games. and pastimes give full informatics M three subjects. There is nothing cbesp &beet it but ice price. An epitome of ,-rerything that is attractive and desirable in juvenile Uterature.-tRostos Courier. A weekly feue of gond things to the bey. and afro In even' family which It visits-- 1Brvo lyre t'nk.n. It is wonderful in Its wealth of picturt he formation, nal i .tcrest.-!Cb: sit ion advocate, K. Y. TEi'.M= P.,stage Prepaid, g." 00 Per Year. Vol. 17. cowwt-/sel Norember t, lath Pievi: X:•vrasss. rive Centtach Renins nes sbnu;d be made byy Puet-Otiee Money Order or Draft. to avoid onetime( ism Nete.pepere are ant to ropy 1 M ed,' rater wni mitbrt the express order of Waimea it Bacrreteta. Add HARP'S** BROTHERS. New Yee The \nacres irtisei' 1885. Harper's Bazar. Ile LVE TRATRD_ newer formally apologised for ha ioeon- siee aey, and she toot possession of the diming -roost every •wesina without the boast apparent perception of the selfish - sees of the prsseding. Amy was great- ly vandalised, bet rsa towsTo each hie tern. Little Amy's will enema some day. mod than eh* too will forgive and aadwaaw&-(Harper a Illms .r. sent. iia weekly Illustrations and .descrip- tions of the newest Pari' sad New York stylus. with 11. ,useful pattempsheet supple- ments sad out 'potteries. wl madam Iodise to be their owe doss makers. saws meq awe tasseled subscription. lits genus ea eeot- leg, tM wareagemeet of pgregstu and Mese- keeping ha Its various Mame are e.NMlte - (Burlington Hawkey.. Wife What's the matter sow. Job n 1 Hesba.d --OIL that murales and toothache sew kips rets. Iia -Why dealt you go to Geo. Rhyme( drag eteree and get • beetle of fluid UAgb1.1set , Yes *sew Ia manse all each Misers es TsoaG •da,eae,gfa Headsets. lumbago. Ear sae, pate Throat, etc. it tires Isetant rue me A Yea eavtug Press•.$. Mr. M. E. Allison, Hutchinson, Kan., sawed his life by a simple Trial Bottle w Dr. Kings New Diseewery, for Osu- sumptiea, which roamed him to proems whoa1a large bottle, hateses Dealers, Ampefeiiaste apiately mad nd i everything ell. hod fated. Asthma. Mtel. nost.ats_. Rowers d Merest aud bang dieensas, ie =rilte saw. Tial B.Nlw M J. es. stens, Lege sin Sl. (1). P'teommen'a Wens Parolees arsagtemeble te take, and impel ell kinds ,nj� were bees ehliblell a albeit%„ loo. The molar remedy, Hagyard's Yellow Oil, i used bath iwtereally sod marital- ly, lar seam pages..retia, erwp, threw - Mims tleaberia, tall lharealarry saltarw ammo elf w i. FOR 18135_ $11700 IB PRIZES 11,7001 SPECIAL FEATURES. 1. Balance of 1166 free to new ..berraberu. 2. Averages tea pages each week--freeuewely more. 3. Bes*tlfully printed M aew WA -feeding Press. 1. $pp*1ie.neddid iAnta.cultnral f epartmc•t. S. Health Hina, bra prominent PIa aintaw. 6. Legal aQa,ueries answered by t1t . ". Felueatlaaal Department by J Dearaslr, S. I� Itepartotent. II. Yoeth's Department. M. Letter* of Travel In rore:gn Countries. 11. lights and Mheaows. 1!. grist llo nears. ll. Preacher* sad c'bnrchea. N. Curium and roefed. Ia. Charming lentils, Music. Pictures. semi K. W Mitosis of the work. 17. From Across the flea, and The WId Worid. l$. Personal and Political. 111. current Cpialon .11 Mort'. ml. Iteadable and pointed Itditnriala : Reliabl News sad Commercial It.pras; aa, latstat Telcarama from ail over lb veer Id. Mach atomise le given tote bi- °`'°°"'"tare �' Mo- le -watt ONLY $1,00 PER ANNUM et t�stier ,�wy�� t��d �yaa lsj/ly 1m�glar���iksew er p I _met, circulated Pam* M'it_sherwxeY Ma wow ger f N • t y .•.na.fa_esaaptiag eW h ori man.. rn I the '«e l in C sante of the A A. eau papers .n treat and two .s Toronto. Per Tear r (IV -WS or AiX PRRMR1MR : fie 04 Our or the following popular Pr'eeliswrt5 . 4 M las forwarded to .act nitr•rabee Orr ISM o t Ort tr.e *null additional ammo r e ee eelewd to portage. etc .brier acnordlist d LIR- Ystae : l.... Mss A..pertralt Gallery. IM. R. Hoar sad Health. tete C. c'har's !Velma u •' --Wellington'pat. Blucher, lee. r. l'b• ttea.evel7. Special Priem. aanted Eliprr►rys ss va u' win be awarded to Marsh went. to the reetweer•d an«tt. ogee tree sassed• terms to.gen:a ear•.. address HARPER'S PERIODICAL& nwssrna � o......,. HABPLR'N MIIIA1/NIS yAgPIKA WRILCbr NA/wPSsKA YOUNG P HAjRPtRB F'RANRL RI R r. Owe rear ism Pesters ilv. in ell .atesrarra is the [foiled Maim er commie. 110 wetmass .1 the lasalu with the first Numbs" ter Jaw rdse When ue nal tVis Ilse with mud atter the Volumes �lms� ere �l volw.a«�vil R W OM1 Muellers. will. :ass: by R sink. e et - h imft teres mg: MRailflnl IfifigTM enrt ii l• ffir . Iasi wM M 0sut e1 wall. »tWtlsifi. ow r.- I ►� CIUb �e tic Posidlera to lavoid 1Miw� w Tits algali9gstria � ww �, iling neer /ads .Aerrftar-rowrauVis es reestpt to[ N�t4e neem • or HAW Se 11 tacber errosie n «.lues ft fiti0TMA111l, !few York. Jce►rns M 5 saes •