HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1897-9-2, Page 3SI i,:(*ERICH, ONTARIO.
TauEtns f, Sept 26, 11591.
Scott's aEtnulsion is Cod.
liver Oil prepared ar a food.
M the same time, it is a
blood maker, a nerve tonic
and an up -builder: But
Principally it is a food for
tired and weak digestions;
for those who are not getting
the fat they should from
their ordinary food; for chil-
dren whom nothing seems
to nourish; for all who arc
fat -starved and thin.
It is pleasant to take; at
least, it is not unpleasant.
Children like it and' ask for
more.
Suva. druaal.' h.v. . "justa good"tli
fitnIt•t
, hied alt olh t7' to eq.m s� .moo fee yell M
1D�ntXMtry '
NlNICHOLSON. LD.S.
e ISWTAL 111.711eaQn.
Houma opposite the Post Odioe
uold rmIng. Crowns and
Bridge Work a Specialty.
e5 Years Yawl nor
1 M. MABEE. D.D.S , L.U.S.,—DEN•
1 J. TAL *UFnILON.-Latent and approved
methods for all dental operations Preserve
ion of the natural teeth a p olaity . Otaoe
aver Jamea Hotline n's ary oda store, col
.sr of Welt 8t, au he 8gnare. 67
T i1L TURN + JLL, D.L S., LO.S.—
. Donal -Samoan. (Lately associated
with Dr. Mere . of Montreal. OolJ and porno.
Illi. artificial teeth mounted on gold or alum.
•sea bases. 'penial attention aIven to the
rbcs 0 the natural teeth. Ofloa la
MisLesabinew block.. Z96-tf
Medical. •
— —
WA. 'THOMSON, M. D , C. M
sae at Reslde000 Illscherhr cecaofed
lh barks v est 8I$---Te10pho..40.
(R. BMW. PHYSICIAN, BCR
veer. kc. Moe -Brew moan. the reel•
asses I.tely occupied by Dr. McLean
delis front aseidenoa Teleph use 6S. _ -
1L (1. CAMERON, BARRISTER, 8011
1TL_ fit.oaster, Roe . oe-cur.
rake
flat Assarewota., *pp. Colborne
filar
10RIFESTRT HEAT=— BARRISTER,
Solicitor. Notary Public. Lohman.
Moot. West Street. >SiwTT
E CA4P1ON,Q.C., BARRISTER, SOI.
. loiter. Notary. he. rimae ever 7(,.te.�
sq tiara Dederick. F
O. JOHNSTON, BARRISTER, SO -
M.. tinker, oaealaWsser. etc Massy to
on. (Mics : oor. Hasnlltoa sed et. A.dtrws
hoveta. Doderich, Ont gat
OFTUS E. DANCEY, BARRISTER,
L Solicitor, Ooaveyaneer, tc.. sta. Mono
b lois at lowest rates. Horwn's Block, 0P-
Smite
pAmite Colborne Hotel. Ooderiok. Ort. 111111-K
N. LEWIS, EHARRIST PROC-
. tor fa Maritime Dear' ,Apr
,Pities- Hoath Ooabor•. boat
1()1
0. HB
O8, *tc. Oroo. Norrho
awxAlOmePrivate a
t
Ic.,t rates t
interest.
GARL'OW b PLLOUDFUOT,
�tst1raSIR-
Attorneys, Boatmen. he., Ueda.
ea. J T. Uaarrrw. Q.C.. W. Preedfoot.
CAMERON, HOLT A HOLMES,
Barrister; Botiettara la
Dailey BoliO. Osmw+s. Q-0. ; P. Rat
JbailG. WARD, OONVSYAI40X1G
. &Merits or
• he %Mat sad ree
• .s, dr."a as
sr adman deseare-
Saes la or••ran sr as
medias is the OUR e
One" et Jwrst use the
•aerl of �letheaasA Ida et. All tramwelleas far or hi l
sYr�-DaaMlsara Oi1LR�sst O.
IIa01Ra*s and Insitranee.
ABROAD
NOW IT OveT8 ROYALTY TO VISIT
----OTHER ROYALTIES.
a:p•s••11ina$ t►. $tsetse t•. .r William
fl. Mast ri..s—A l{opabu.•a rre•1-
dent'• aapeasus in • atalLr 0.•e
Mast Garp••• ThamesOf as smp.rm.
Though Inrperor William II. has :tot
poor to Undria on his 61,000,U1.10 apextal
trate this year, his trip to ss' curtly and
splendid as tea former t ccaeious of the
kind. He has teens fleet of feu area-
ot-war with ham. btlaidte the waist
thnatg a secretaries, ottltxr• sad ser-
vants, numbering ail told some 150 mea
lu tui seting trot. which is a part of
bis baggage on every trier to the tuurt,uf
a fortsgu sovereign, he tautest B200,W0
baoleir, rtttia watches, diadems, doldmlomf
pretetttiwa trinkets for less pretentious
persona. • About 580,000 in trash la fatten
along, as the your of the i..Iaaisu caeitel
mast have their couventioul -gratuity of
Pm) or $6II00, the nteu aboard the Ger-
man imdt,r must have than "drink
money" on the days of ereatast rejoic-
ing, and gold puree must be scattered
lavishly among the htnuired and one
servant. and' officials who come
in contact hourly with the 1anperial party.
As may be seen from thu inc•uwple+,e
list a the b�weroea - event ex lweuset.
it is a costly t hug to be an Emperor
abroad in Ecru
It is also a (costly thing to be the host
of an Emperor abroad in Europe. With
tate items of the; iteral demonstrations,
military reviews, illumientions, garden
yy.erties, and household acoomuiodatiour
included, it is estimated that the Czar.
must spend some 540.000 a day to en-
tertain his (;eruuui martin.
Hardly will the German Emperor be
out of the way w4ien President Faure
of France will arrive at Cornrtauit with
mere ship«, more attendants and more
demands mom the capacity of the Iter
manoff court to dazzle rad -animal..
Faure, too will be under obliyation+_'.
play the oppa banded chief M men.
though not on the magnificent male
whites let required in the crow of a mon-
arch "by the grace of 1;41.. Of the
SIOA IW10 tr:tvehi* expenses allowed
Felix Faure by the French Chambers
be tijll_gere VOW to topeow of �2os-
eqw and Rt. Petersburg. 1'i(NAr 10 tbi'
onlcer' he takes with him and the Rus-
sians who do bin services that merit
ttrifs. The
-Embassy-lagrand ria. t '
art 18000. The two honks to bei- en
the liar have cost him 022101 anal "drink
money" for the men of the Horny de
!tome. in which he will sail h. CornsTadt.
wilt swallow up $15'01 more.
The Preach ne'wel:ope ; say that the
of all this solrodor m the Rus -
nn capital has tamed Ftutreo head,
anti they m?Heionsi'v mention -hila one --
adapt as Felix I. They tell a story is
illustrate his growing ren.einnieness 414
his tlwakeeportimo A M indster m-
&ntly telephoned' ins recants to i'reai-
*pt Faure a few minutesbefore Zthe
hi
he
r ret for a Oenet diaper.
aiert`etay tke master of ceremonies at the
glvre called upon the Mirdster. drew
a Long face, end amtonrtoted that he bad
an important eiattmenica ion tram the
Pr•.i.h'nt to the He then pr -
pro-
ceeded to dwPI1 upon the inprooriet3
• Minister U'I,Ohouing regrets to the
Chief Magistrate of the great French
people. "h1. President requests ent-
phatarehy.' be said in conclusion. "that
hereafter you otroert•e the etiquette of
the EIyoee hay e.xmrnnicating with him
opply by letter when it is eattaeaible 'tor
yen W eornammicate with bine in person.
Now the Minister thus addressed was
ire awed with the wont at the time. But
he Is from the south of F ance.►snd
when he went- to -Parris he Wilk his tem-
per with him. He rose in wraith.
planted his barn feet nn the, floor. and
poiotiog his finger at the master of cere-
monies, .hooted:
Mr. Masers of Ceremonies, as a man
yon have my respect: I have no quarrel
with you. i eharl tw glad to have you
it here with me and take a glass of
Madeira. Rtrt to yea as master of cere-
monies I have this to say:
"To the devil with you and your Mr.
Faure and your etique-ete. Tell him that
—tell him that for me."
The master of etweersonies did npt wait
ter hie glass of Ma4eira or Ws little
conversation with the Minister. but int
rued off in eoaf*eiot.
It k owing to this story and a dozen
more like it that the French newspapers
refer elan to tt1 wi ee.' duce hpro a moo[
*was to be the guest of the Saar. •n
that they ridicule him as Felix I.
PrtvM loadsls Iso8 M M se? cwt a•-
•auW. M. U. OAII>LRON Honer'. k.
sesame Colborne Moret t Match.
PRIVATE 'FUNDS—P18R8ONS DE -
moody rue erst-olow
tas seooriti eta dodo soa
tans at 6 p seat. bi ate
t! r fit J. A. Mo IreaA GH, !loan tw ree-
W ibes
CC SEAGSR, OONNEYANCINO AND
llasimaseathes. unwire ¥rear'• HM.I,
11ffoNEY TO LEND ON 1MO�RgTTOAOS
a
Mme"`. Bar«spa'g
sshsNg edits arleadh.A
FJ. T. SAFT111., I/IIts, LI10 M AwND
• saddest
IIONHT 'DQ LlI'Il—A LARGI1
ameba Fares ferIersaiiu
Andy
-pp ni
. •..n.1°"', GSL Ira
�..e y siMMaf t
carat, at the tuns imeaf es a�tl Ori :
a wail
tS'
•-a TUTU ANI°d' 1Qfs'1'I•
Wo • '1'i)T1. woo ase 7 AND -
skim
Nes frets t is • P sad item 7 to lI rate
ABOUT 11000 VOL'S IN LIBRARY.
'T shrewil ,, Weekly wed IIngskak
M1eMHlp11191P�1� M l,jOs..M gain
orating tree a.a �e�a.
""1601,111a ja ;Ekiri.
Uhrorimt. Moe
• 8. oOL1QltlflL. S. QAMILr'oN.
!^eafek Ksz.L'111b ttM.
A
E OF FROCKS AND PINAFORES
Anon Jack w s *J. giants aria;
Mimeo And Mas Maher from the shads
Of deft An ne ',tamper will,
1 *uubt ase not riffle rhymer ere made;
And stubborn not,
with hoe sad spade.
7116. her old rote u[ botaalat.
The goose, still playa at alchemist.
The mouse sad havoc is our oiseka
As In—that craved on exorol.t-
The day of pisaforea and frocks
Thr runners `listen as the hill
gleaned in filar toads ot Frost's brocade,
The coasters' voices they art .krill
As when'0n hearth -rug deep I stand
lu awbuah with my brave brigade,
And named each metal warttal
0 time ot sweets none could resist
And gingerbread W cupboard crocks!
Their skies were rose sod amethyst.
The days of pinafore and truck•
dad years have come and gone, until
Meseema all mirth's a ma•eluerade;
And all that's left of loves gruwu
Are scars brought from the sweet .remade
Friends waxes dour as Moil, betrayed;
And giants, I have Lound, exist
That o'ertop Jack's. Hut vbo audit
Life's all a huge Pandoran box
Those honeyed days have surely mlrrtd-
The days of pinafores and frocks
Fortuna. glee me "hist ye Ilett
Of fame fame and all good things ye win.
Ye can't restore m7 childhood's locks
Nor bring me bark the snnshlne-kl't,
The .days of pinafores mud prie
—8l)WAItD W. hake! *P. 6h The Him -
tine. y
ANYBODY MAY LEARN TO SWIM.
Two ball Hours ot Determined Maori
Will Accomplish It.
The fact that so many lose their 11 1•
because they have, never learued to
swim will. I trust, be regarded Beni -
(tient apology for pointing uut the fur-
ther
urther tact that anybody may learn to
swim in two•Aalf boor' spent Iu deter -
'mined effort to that end, says a curre-
spoudent of The New York 'Timer. To
begin witk, let it be understood that the
act of "treading Yater" consists in
simply remaining m one place in Ole
water in uu upright po.iti..0 by motion
of the arms and legs moyed as • dog,
hdrse or oz move* his legs in swimming
emitting his effort ice Mauer fesseavd.
This having been upderatood, let the
tyro wade out from the whore in. gradu-
ally deepening water until be finds him'
'elf in water. say, up to nes chin; then
tarn rtwnd,..tace the shore and proceed
to tread water. cuntiltuiug his effort
math he finds himself at,.udaa'qg awngh_.
his feet not touching 1"ttohlHalf
an hour's per'irtcnt effort wiU enable
him to master this, ills first "iiesse>n.
]Qbee--he has dune r, wuch, he has
-„neatly e4D --tho ate' bmdg1e++u.
When he again goes into the water,
let hint again go out to the same depth,
turn runnd, face the shore as beton•,
and otrike out in front, with his hands
and arms, at the same time kicking
backward. He will tind, almost before
be Is aware of it, that he is off' bottom
and slowly swimming toward the shore.
In fact. he has learned to swim. 11ie
flights will be short at first. Ile .can
easily learn the common strokes and
methods of swimming atter he has ttret
learned tie swim dog fa4*n.,n. All he
needs. however. is prnctice to enable
him to swim at will, aeYording to Lis
physical otrength. In these suggestions
the masa-Wine is assumed to include the
feminine.
Th. Vastem Meat.
In the first piece.the
rblnia most
be pronounced aW
novelty. s
The access
t � developed over
achieved
asusialh
new factor h eroluttook
Moreover. the %sublea la eswe is ao
more than an experiment. a Inst
Elbe le to the ship o[ aha thew* what
the 'Genitor was to the Lathered b*til-
w the
wag At the be navalrt' fullpower
malotsl rue Spot
thirty -rive karats, or over o[ the Mane stiles par
hoar. fee do
langth of kat*
Mips. er iboot five mike Darin:
sed there was an absence f strain,
from Mooedin this iMttie Teasel memo Chats t'.
been reached. sad that atter fart!
hopto.ements, as present 1n r+usn
the well he o•sebb se .ot only
lea her pixie= as seek the fastest ma•
eel s.Aoat, but win be able to"eve man
)tarty to any competitor with
I'et'ip*o'st
roZ beanengines. What bas really
the 'Purbinla is that.
widened auto or vibration. canine/1d
tar8lnte maim*, tofunprecedetrbdly small
�i
weight are of the most dn
it
sod eeemoml(ca1 Conversion of the power
et steam into effective horse -power.
Ent there le Nothing thin matinee the
tins* of the principle to small
Hence there is nothing exalt -
genteel nngnn
in looking to n nmentati
that ern ile fairly deOcriMv!
as • novelty or Mew element in naval
warfare.
ltgo
•ad Ohl
Pl. it= sikatemoners
•*ewe asseotinei r ant team tlratrlyeM•
1100, Iva,
I44A.e Autiaets ate Herr 0.
Ithemarck, whn had worn himself out
1s Me aerviep of tieernoto y and his an-
�
troe tram!' referred to the !!berm for
}M Pi eherband. . One morning he and
the xnip mor William were riding to-
gether In the park. They had not gone
tar when iti.marck complained of f*-
tlgoe. The Emperor, who was quite
fresh. said eoatewhat taatlig-
11ovr is it that, t lis an
elder roan that yourself,at
I eon
(always 0attiele reuT'
Bieaarck's reply was as ritehfnl
as ft war orlgremmetle.
Ilisire he amid, 'the rider always
. t Li the iorse."—Pittsburg Dir
/*Wk.
A CNatrr Without • rtdtseaL
qy railroad Wilder& oat et wOt'k
Alaska With a territory ll
tnry tat tis if not an ba
lame as New Tort state, k La het a
*elle road, or soy *450? kind
d! •rima elft �154titt,
lose "� rots* i Make• whirr
ergo., wad, Wplg yet our s7 t
sot built a tee shay
acetesimodedion Thele o0K1 .:.neepoKa
1 fW-d•
+flat Ol.Jtdi. tit t*� * at
wsklart-- anwsJf
A•N.TIa'■ Imperial l'awa Shop.
Austria lana an Imperial pawn shop.
It was established in Vienna in 17)IT,
when there was great di*tress, among
the poor in the southern part of the em-
pire. It was designed apo a wsy to
secure to the starving some means of
immediate relief. and by putting the
rate of interest as low as poasibie. and
the valuations as high as poesible, and
embodying in the system every advan-
tage that could be.giveu to make loans.
it was found to be so effective that it
soon gained the imperial sanction, and
it was not long until its managers were
made public oMeuse' under the direction
of the Minister of the Interior. This
is substantially the status of the insti-
tution at this time. The rates are so
low that the tinniness done on the cheap
goods and chattels of the poor could
not possibly make the establishment self-
sustaining: but people whn have been
suddenly reduced in circumstances, or
whn are temporarily embarrassed. keep
the margins on the right side and enable
the institution to keep open without the
aid of a suheldy. in the year 1803 •
total of 866,015 a-'kb's were pledged.
and of these 848,562 were redeemed. a
remarkable redemption as compared
with the proportions nt the average
pawn shop. The unredeemed pledgee
gebtMwnctfore- end --
ever they brought more than the lace
of the pledge the balance we -5 sent to
the account of the pledge. to be jefund-
ed any time within three yiara London
Spectator.
POPE LEO'S BUMMER L1FL
1trttlag More Latta remarry egad 8s.4rdg
Up Arb/traria.
Ziutwithetanding
the
lase. bet.
which 1n Rome this year
as-
sumed extraotvituary prvpurtions, Leo
X111. maintains his usual health. fed -
lug, istieed. rather better and struPger
thou In the wafter. til• liolluess pauses
the but hours of the day lu the apart,.
meta espwyally , trepsred for him in the
tower of Leu IV. in the Vatican gar
dens, where, bymotion of the' thickness
of the walla, the temperature ia always
fresh. Prof. Leptons, his personal doc-
for, baa otter remarked to me that the
summer serum to benefit hint. and that
the season to be feared is the winter,
wheu it is almost ilnywsible to keep
an even temperature In the imueuse
apartments of the Vatican, and to pre-
vent draughts, the lightest of which is
always felt by His lin/Meas. Besides
this, the Pope leads In the summer
ailoutha, without doubt. • much earner
life than le the winter, Demure of the
comparatively small amount of business'
to be transacted and the almost entire
swepenskom of functions and receptlous,
which are for him moat exhausWag.
Now the Pope riles rather early, and
immediately receiver a teeuwe of neer
cowing from all para of the world, pre-
pared purposely for him in the most con-
densed form by a .pedal otllce iu, the
Vatican, which works from midnight
until the hour fur receiving it, sum-
marizing it from telegrams, letters, and
newspapers. Theeueral outlook . over
the world is shortly after completed by
a visit from Cardinal Rampulll, with
whew he discusses the must important
affair.. After a frugal laseedzfases ac-
companied by his private attendant, he
desecrate to the garden and la driven to
the tower of Leo rv., eat -toned only bT
a member of the Noble Guard, with
whom he converses amicably about the
doings and gossip of the town. Ile usu-
ally deeeeuds from his carriage to take
a walk in his flower 'gardeu, which,
though not la e, is bright with blos-
soms, and in which he is said to take
a'great interest. tie occupies himself
also with the growth of the grave vines.
.per
a pes.oaall on the pubject with
favoritefatruth, SepetrfaUy the p tello.
an oblong white grape, found almost
exclusively near Rome. In the tower
he attends only to eccleaiartical or liter-
ary work, especially Latin poetry, in
whieh he Is 'tech an adept, and, it little
b,•fose-aanad, return as he, came to the
Vatican Palace. 1f nothlug of great Im-
portance ha' occtrretl be is not '.ltatarb-
etd with politics until the •next morning.
It .is atloid -that tire' Pupa;t. A.t�lrealt __
t -at eeeflirseltin taws
the Subject a international _arbitration:'
of which hwijs such a staunch advocate,
and which hp considers a principle pe-
culiarly appertaining to the domain of
the Papacy. Ile says that the duty
the cowmou.I:athe ut tit* Faithful
and of the Head ofCatholicism is -to
work for the establishment of perma-
taent peace among uation.I He seems
to think that the concert of powers
which has so long succeeded In renal*r
ing uniuimoas with regard to the Le-
vant question. is a step tuwar.l the So-
alisation pt his cheJruhod, ideaL—Poll
Mall Gazette.
a•aehl•. 1n Itellstoa.
Sapabine has Its ares In making our
religion what it ehouid be --a thing of
brightness. There is danger of making
it too cold and gldbmy• God did not
intend it to be thus. It is a difficult
matter, at any rate, to induce men to
accept religion, and if they•re left L
der the imppreadon that When use
they unite
with the ebu rh they are going into fne
anchor and gloomy region of an Arctic
land. it will make it all the more dim -
cult to induce them to choose the better
part. I.et joy, brigktaess, geniality,
tempered by the spirit of Jesus, eharaC-
terize our religion, and these persons
will lay hold of it with earnestness. teat
as make nae of .anahloe everywhere.
Do ears come let us go at them with
aaashiny hearts. They will soon melt
away ander its power. If afslc IDne
do come notbi*g will ao brighten the
sickbed as sunshine. Is the home dark-
ened by the shadow of death? !lameness
will lighten it and show ns the golden
etairwa7 up which ear departed have
gone. Sunshine, sunshine everywhere -e,
in the home, in the thumb, There is
joy and brightness la hearse. -pus
should it be wantiag here? -
Thr Ladish Are I.aar.twt.
Among the bithei4 ranted benefits
conferred upon hamalnity by the bicycle
b the devebpmeat In women of a ten-
dency to observe "the rake of the road,"
not oa11 when tidies on their wheels,
but on the devoted rel war stairway.,
while paseiag along (Toweled sidewalk.
and In similar places where, easel recent-
ly, the feminine habit has been to in-
eonvetieeee Maw plode as much as
towable. This haat. thus.* ascribed
of stupidity, but i sflp lee to lack of
that Matinee -re courtesy, u dlirtingniab-
ed from required courts», which. is the
cue trait setting Imes apart from wo-
men, tax beet mnch tereakte*ed by the
abenlnte nece•aity impesed upon ai1 bi-
cvenate nt giving to 0480 a a fair share
and the rislnt share et the road. Non -
riding women still shag to the old, lead
way, bat' a marked itlpeoweme it vlsssvis-
it&the is He ye-nirate sea -Noir York Timm -
The
1tloosslderate set,— s
The *ether's tamilvIIIes.
Rad 1 se 1lttle flet to ruse*
Along ittVs saillIn . gray,
Mr ewe seers bequeath might MIK
Waft .etas es •stray.
as grtiN' l ...twe ay bbaa�ahaay"�a,, eyes,.
nt. yty
!Paw me te,**id abs �1
Y1111b kaki/ held• sly lass&
cert
sairiested lit.
�k/gklre q w • i keinisAY
dare
r'
Tead.ru.as Is \..t ERrmlracy
When we 'look at the quality of ten-
derness, we see £t once that it is not
effeminacy. If it were, then we, who
are men all over and all through, every
inch of us and every ounce of us, would
be burred but by our pronounced 'marcu-
linity. The world loves to say that re-
figion 1. for , women. and children and
the ministry is for men who are effemin-
ate in quality, unequal to the rough
and tumble of the world, which means.
in the plain, not good enough, for any-
thing except to be clergymen. And
wbeu it sees one in the ministry whose
intellect commands respect, whose hair
is short, whose muscle Is big, whose
voice is resonant. and whose garb is
not a label of his calling, it is apt to
sty, in California phrase: "He ought
to be in politica; be ham no business
to be hoeing small potatoes in the gar-
den of the Lord."
There are men whose phrenology,
physiogponry. and physiology mark them
as gentle and retiring. They have a
strong, sweet dash of the fe'mipine.
Some of them get into the mipltry.
There they are beloed, and lead quiet.
happy, useful lives, sometime* going to
the front. But inability to battle with
the world keeps many such from reach-
ing the front ranks. For every promi-
nent pastor knows that the lawy,r or
the merchant has lip severer tussle with
Ila, ,lbe . 1men oink.trebg in.
b, ellen, wen men of st as
Capacity school themselves to a tender-
ness
enderness that is not their! by natnte that
the qualityshines out—August at Sense
and ad.
t
Th. Peroernol Factor la Pr.ss•i.s.
Herbert Spencer says: "He that with
men is a success must begin with being
a Brat -class animal." The Abbe Roux
quotes a lecturer in Notre Dame as say-
ing: "If one wishes to preach well, one
oust have the devil in one's body. ' 1f
he had added, "and God in his heart,"
we should have seen more clearly fhb
point. Robust and Sargent animal force
and inatinot, such ass ng from, splen-
did health and nate passions, are a
Large element of power in the preacher
when reined and guided by the dominat-
ing power of the Spirit of God. Mental
and moral power sometimes
from a man who, like Robert 11, fs
a martyr is physical pain, brit as a rule
the aspect and tone of the physically
feeble are a discount on his impressive -
Sega
Courage also he needs, the courage
se conviction, of the faith which sees
the invisible; the courage .t his com-
mission and colds. as at ambassador
for Christ He must dare to be 1
pendent cif 'kappa and "ologtes."
courage not oily to do, bat to suffer,
taunt h. his. Whet that knightly
pasacher, Robertson of Brighten, was
warned by a woman that his doetrine
world expose him to ostracism by the
authorities as the Church of Ifingbnd
he calmly Answered: I don't are?t
"But, Mr.Robertson." was the ominous
warning. "do you rememberhere
'don t care' brought the mann "Yea,
UM he, with utmost serlona "to the
cress." To every brave prey her the
Dolph wi11 he a eras and a throne.—
Rev.
hrone—v. J. 8. Hammed. la the AEgast
Homnetio Review.
Toch • DerUsr see • Mw B*.oea.
An old derby was arcaded for ttlal-
ga silver dollar. The dollar s
rand ason lab Verson and ;produced to
court.
"Yon stole this snoopy?" asked the
is whet dsail. Whir
eeer ll. what have you to say for yauar-
eri
all
anti. anttfn' much, 'Cepthe dat
I wag early ter it. /
I riven b it f
"Yes, sub. You ass. Jedwe eat Behar
had a bird on it. ea It biked ao ssoe�
eke a gain chicken dat i thousat I
wns in hen mos'. en des outruny bat -
Red 1t!' -Atlanta Oas.tit*ttloa
Ttalttoe Petah. .t Messrs.
D bherrnro-el. en* sr
l ao. i.awrerlr. and
Axed taw' melfersg trials *t
...tete: Copper melte Zama
..ilv.r melts at
0
INVIRE . into the Berate of tutea you drink.L
Unadulterated natural ,cal ole 1
P
A OST : tw gavot can ou all "I am well satin
-hid.” If not
6
L
DE' LA"
CEYLON TEA
It nevbr fails' It is delicious.
Your Grocer keeps it. 25, 40, 80 and 60c. Lead
Packages.
Qui.ckcilre
-h the quickest remedy ever known
to cure Burns, Bruises, Scalds, Cuts,
Sores, Boils, Sprains, Strains, etc.
The manrweil known people, of
high standing in the community, who
have spoken and written of the merits
of Quickcure, show that itjs an honest
remedy of great efficacy.
Note the testimonials in this issue.
T-? -STURDY BROS._
T1IG ROCEFiES
-Vessel Supplies a Specialty.
STURDY- BROS.
FAM1VY GROCERS—THE SQUARE:
e
WESTERN FAIR.
LONDON, SEPTEMBER 9th TO 18th, 1897.
CANADA'S FAVORITE LIVE STOCK AND AGRICULTURAL EXHIBITION.
The nest complete Live Steck BalldI.i' 1■ Amerces. Wire len pr.vemeats and ex•
t.nslve additions fhb year. Every Stockman. AgrIcaltnrist, Maaulaetarer, Dairyman
Artists arid IR teller's. enc.. ate., .prd.Ily Invited.
Entries ease Sept. 510. In all Departments. Nueoe•s assurerd, -- •
SIe Hassen Ben Ali, The Arab Prince,
Mas been secured to furnish and saperlatead the Stage Arad!•.
Auction Bale of Booths and Privileges, Aug. 15th, on the Grounds at J p.m.
For Prize Lists, Programme and Maps, apply to
LT. COL. F. B. LEYS, Pawkiest....-......._ .,: 'TMOB. A. BROWNE, Secretary.
$ farmers, Dairymen
And their Wives,
Drop us a post card, and get free our
booklet on'IINDURATED FIBREWARE."
I _go>rts nothing, tells all about Indurated
-Abre Pails. Milk Pans, Dishes and Butter
Tubs, and will put money in your pockets.
THE E. B. EDDY COMPANY, Limited
HULL, CANADA.
OOTS
OES
Including the SLATER
and all other A 1 goods
AT
SHARMA.N'S
Our Goode are the beet thatican be obtained, and are sold at
Rook Bottom Priem.
Hundreds of pictures leave our store weekly. They are the
prettiest on earth, an nothing can teotllpare with • handsome woman in
• pretty, neatly -made, fashionable pair of shoes, and .we only sell such
M becomes the sweetest of pictures.
McL$lkN'S BLOCK, GODS**e..