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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1897-10-07, Page 66 Twessu.4, Oot. 7, 1897. 3EV NAT.: �. m ($ ARI0. W. C. T. U. DEPARTMENT. THE TWO GLA8SES- Ther.IM two glasses, MUad w the brim, On • rob mea's table, rim to rim ; Gee wee ruby, sad red se bleed. Aad one as c ear es the areal eoo4. Sold the glen of wheelie his paler brother. "lest us tell she takes of tie past to etch other, 1 cru tell of beeves& revel lad soiree And the proudest and grandest male on he Tau nodes me boob, es tbosgn streok by blight, Mare I was king, for 1 rule 1 in might. From the heeds of kluge have I torn the Wawa. From the height* of fame bevel buried men down; I have blasted many en honored name. I have when virtqs rad given shame, 1 have temp'ed the youth with a sip, • eat*, That has mode the future a barren mums. "Far greater than soy king em 1, Or than any army beneath cheeky. I bsv.,rnede the arm of the driver fail, And cent the trate from the iron nil. 1 have made good ship, go dows •tee•, And the shrieks of the lost were sweet to me ; For they aid, 'Behold, how great you be Fame, atrsurih, wealth, genius before you f.11, And your might and power are over a11.' Ho ! Ito ! pale brother." laughed the wine. "f %•a yealaast of deeds as'reel as whs.!" Said the crustal glen:—" I ore* not bout Of a king dethroned or • murdered host ; Bat 1 naw tell of hearse time ones were tied By my ory,tul drops made light and el•d ; 01 tbirst I'es quenched, and brows I've laved, Of hands I've cooled, and souls I've saved. I've leaped through the valley. dashed down the mountain, Laid is the lake, and denoted m the loon - tato, Slept in the sunshine, and dropped from the sk v. And everywhere glogiiiiined tbs l.ndsoape sod e{w. I have eased the hot forehead of fever and 1 have meds the parched meadows grow eietees withrain ; -'r" r-evi>P"Otlriff irbnlhi 60444 legit That 'rotted out the hour, and tamed .t my will 1 o.o NII you of manhood debased by you That I have lifted sod crowned anew. I cheer. I help, I strengthen and .id. I gladden the heart of man and mud ; 1 set the wine Awned captive free, And .11 are better for knowing me." Theis .re the tale. they told each other— The glees of wins and its paler brother— As they sat together, filled to the brim, On the rich man's table. rim to rim. Lady Henry Somerset's home for in. *brutes, at Duxhurst, Surrey, t[ngl.nd,has accommodation tor asventy•five or eighty patients, but last year the man.gemsot was compelled to refuse admission to throe thou- sand two hendreid case*. FAMOUS WOMEN COMING Lemnos eelessoce to the W.rld'e W. t. T. 1'. (t.rv5ette■ whleb Will be ■esd next geteber. The orogr.mme tor the great gathering of the foremost women ot the world is rapidly warning strep.. Among the prominent women who will address the convention are: Mile Frame R. Willard, LL D , President ot the Work 's Union ; lady Henry Somer- set, Vio.•President, whoa eloquence and power are far -tamed ; Miss Agnes E. Slack, bbs energetio Secretary; Miss Anna A. Gordon, Assistant Secretary sad leader of the world's juvestle host, and Mr.. Sander- son, Treasurer, as well as President of the Quebec Provincial Unlos. Fran the B. W. T. A. a large delegation is expected, the mart prominent among whom are ; Mn. end Miss Lite, of London, England ; 8ut r Lily, one of the desoonest- se ot Hugh Pelee Hughes' West London Mission ; Mrs. Hughes of Manchester, Eom lastly eseat-14-w: $buss of hereby = Hoglund, Yiae-President of the B. W. T. A., and a dssoscdsat of Thsoksr.y, the famons novel- ist. A telszy of talent is expected from the wNrbboring repubito, including Mrs. L. M. N. Stevens, Vioe•Preetdenl of the National Calm ; Mrs. Katharine Lente 8tsvessoa, Corresponding Sanitary ; Mrs. Clan C. Hoffmas, Recording Secretary ; Mrs. Teton E. Beauchamp, AesbtsntSsoreter , and Mrs. Helen M. Barker, Treasurer. In addition to the general otsoers, areezpeoted Mrs. Hannah J. Batley, Wcrld's Saperin modest of the Deportment of Peas end Arhitrsesoa, • Qoakh ledy residing in the Mate of Maiss, and said to be the wash b- last woman in the State ; Dr. Mary Wood - Allen, the celebrated parity worker ; Miss Elizabeth W. Greenwood, the sveneelistio leader ; Mrs. Caroling K. Woodward, the brirht trsasportatios .goal; Mn. Louis Roads, Illinois, President ; Mrs. A. S. Benjamin, Michigan's President ; Mrs iJbsrheltzsr of Philadelphia, sooeemist and author. • From the negro workers will Daae the famous Mrs. Booker. T. Washington of Ala- bama, and Mrs. Lao Thurman of Mioki- rm. Australia's delegation will hs one of the lamest ; and most influential from ditto) pares amour It will be Miss Venni and Miss Cummings of Sydney, organizers and Motsrers; Lady Wisdsyer, National Super - blandest of Fromstein and an enthustsstle pbllan/beot►ttt ; Mrs. Kirk, Secretary and gas of Austrelis's meet bromWag wanes ; Miss Wan of Viotoris, and Mrs. Ardill ot New youth Wales. Front foreign nations many promises* r women are already en the way to Tomato. Miss Joha.Wottl, Nttioaal Pr.sid.at of ars Iodated W. C. T. U., has already ',- rived la Americo and Is viaitta lnesds Is Fsssglveair. From Jams ewe delsgeten art already Is America, Mee Tont, Inouye of '1'Atln. sad Miss M. A. Vats,. Nies Eriebsas will reprsssst ?island; Mn. Allo' Gorden Gabak, grant Minn le* sb, Re - Wog. 9yrt.. ; idles Clark, Medawar ; Mas Elegies Milks, ChM, $oath Amities; Mime Grua, Hawaii, while kd pt will send Mee. Frames Griffin end Mum McDowell. It is srpseted that this will he the Ivrea sed ,met rspreswsaHve g ibeeleg of wo- mbat aver held hi Amerla► Toronto 14 xVteiso pain" M At161aly wsleem. the .d genets frees ail payee et the glebe .sits firth hewer .el blass she gilt' is their delIMr ions esd ',seals. Gleba. Zak*: gyeu. Oabek , of the Beesnsr b Hae Telemet , aa4 es tmmsw ere, this year. He other - Mehta hes tee tees& diselmell et at 18 Y -►-tea„ ,�.:Mme HOW TO CHECK THE EX000S- stemenmatMIftesat. To the &dlbr et Tu. hence . THE Canadian living in the United MW camber sow 11114s abort of a militias and • kilt. Oar josses* see Minya 'eying "Mop !" but they sever try to tell as how the .topping ons be dose. If oar editors ere too .lack to tkink, their readers, perhaps may tale it ap. To shirt the bell rolling. I submit today some praoMoal suggstiow, and in two other letters whlob I mala.., I have attempted to deal with the subject from different points of view. The Ontario stilet in the United States, as ws know. ars for the mood part employed as meohanios, clerk., busiow end profes- sional men, tor whom to this ooantry we have not room. Most of them ars farmers' eons. and it is likely thac many would have followed their tethers' ocoup•tion if they had not gained, through the .duoation they rsoeived, not only tee .knowledge which enabled them to end occupation abroad, bus also a distaste for the kind of work which the farms of Canada provide. So we are eduating our young people out of the oouo- try. Well ! What Dao we do! Shall we ay that farmers' sow always sleet be farm- ers? Shall we say that it is necessary to keep the poor man in igooranos in order test he may be inroad to work with his bands' (sod morbid ' But, before we my the thing o.000t be helped, we must be abtote• tely certain that our system of education is Dot to blame in any way for /he asl.obtet we deplore. Is it not true that we hide measured the excellence of our edumtional system, not by tee opntgstmeat add prssperby of the is - habitants of this country in their different etmup•tions, bob hy the number of students who ohms ezaminettoos and the stamen of Canadians •broad ! Is it not true that the eduo.tioa of the maws in our public) school. to heD made subirdin.te to the higher education of • few ! le it not true that the bright boys are encouraged to enter other pursuits and the dullards aro left to the farm' - Oas thing is certain. If ws °options to manage our education upon thew lines the Provinos of Ontario will advances. For we aro nothing. U we are not •e agriooltu- ral oountrv. Farming is a different game from what It used to be, and to make it pay emti corset wort ease Okalave► age and our but. Ws boast, and rightly boas:, that in this country, so far as education is onncereed, every man has an 'goal °haoos. But after all said sod dose. ws mono, gel over the faot that we must loot to oar farmers sone to plow and sow and to harvest our crops, for the city -bred boy is no got d the oess• try and very few ever go on the how - Reform is in the air It is Mood to coins sloe ; and Om problem that oor r4• formers most pin and keep before them so their desks is this : How to give the groat - est amount of edumt00 to our taxmen soft, sod keep upon the farm those who are not epsoinlly adapted to some other call- ing. Some exoall.ot letters have lately ape pared in the press upon the abject of edo- oation.l reform. It hat hese pointed out that in our public schools we want a filler tenures, more thorough training, more suit• able subjects and osrudely, •t least In seri. cultural districts, • oompuleory course to geology, hominy and agriculture. Bot then* is one point, and • very important point, whiob the oritioe seem to have quite over- looked. verlooked. Our public school teachers are all ot them trained In the !fish soboob and twelve hundred oertieated towhees are turned oat every year. The Minister of Education mays " This gives an importance to the exis- tence of the High schools perba in eves greater than is attached to any ether of their useful fuootio.. " But, so far as it affects the population question, it is mie- ohievoos in the extreme. It is misohisAgns from two points of view. Teaching in Ontario Is not profession. It is a stepping stone to something 'lee—very, vary seldom indeed to terming, bat to mer. motile or professional life. We oanoot blame the teaeb.r for not sticking to hie school, for there is no bottom limit to his salary, nor Is there any limit to the annual Drop of teachers we turnout,and oonsequsnt. Iy, owing to Olio ezosesiye oompetition. she pay 10 often tispeiriuf atsgree and soul together. But, small as 11 t., the prospect of the pay is the bait that .Waite into• pupils to our High soboola T6ns,ws see that teaching bas become one of the principal avenues which lead our y Jung people from the farm. Amin, the tatting of the teacher nearly always effect' upon the aspirations of his scholars. Is the rural districts, when the Pablo schools are what they ought to be, we shall not want the pupils to go away from home and board in a town to Oaks • high school oourss noises they show some spsolal aptitude for mero•etile esd hai- rless millings, Manse we haus learnt by ex- perieooe that the High school and town as- ' oclatlons spoil sur young people tor the farm. We ooald tot, therefore, piok eat a woes. Lind of man to take charge of oar rural schools than a graduate of • High sehool whose aim and object is life Is to get •way from the farm. The man we want to tomb In sur public stanch' is one whose sympathies and tastes have zed been edaeated so se to be oat of tench with the lite that surround. him. I_ oar rural Matelots we want • neon who, If be gave ap teaohing, would Tike be spend his life upon • farm. For Ibis kind of man we must look not to the High soheoi. al Colt Iegi•te Institutes, bbl to the Agricultural College. el Guelph, for the etatiselos et that College show that nearly •11 the graduates who are farmers' Mae, return at maks their (tela, ea the farm. It a re•sotab's to sap - pose that it pearlsiot was meds for the Salida/ of psblle same! Mahon at Guelph, if the Agrloulserel College oonld duals the halt of • Istober's salty which the High eenoels a1 presesl have all to themselves, • • fresh impetus "maid be gives to the study el sericulture, and we should then hays feathers is oar Pablls "'heels who are ga•ti. Awa to give 1esteselbn N Agrloalteral nh Pots. Ab she tame Sam the ittslligeaw apd soofsl Mandhg of our loaners through • esestry would be raised and at (eat we sbsuld heel arm. wtmrgMeg to ghee eft si the worst leaks in ear hovel. .aedtrr HIATox. TABLE LINEN. etapl. Tesat.est te Keep It apoaese. W Alto sad caw. Table knee, to ba pulls cannot, malt at all times be spotless and perfectly white. In order to attain this result, each of the various pi—ocean of tautuder- ing must be carefully performed. Soled table linens, as they accumulate during the week, wuet De placed in a basket kept specially for this purpose. It L not quite pie:taut to picture it as freely *Marled with the rest ext tie tastily wash either 'before or after laaaderteg. Before weshing these linens, each piece should be *separately examined for stains and [rayed spots. To facilitate the laundry work, aa well as to prevent attains from becoming permanent, they must be Completely [moved from the lit., -es before these are placed in the tub. This may appear aug,ceasary 'o the maid accustomed to tabbing the swots with soap and complacently set- teug than on to boil; but her method is rarely to ctessful, and to remove the q eta afterward involves a large amount of extra labor. Fruit stales disappear if rubbed with butter and scalded by pouring water from the boiling kettle through the spot. the lifts tended icing held ...over • bowl. Wine stales are taken out by dipping them in a pan of ht.iling water to which n spoonful of ammonia has been dissolved. Chocolate and cocoa stains are emoted by thickly soaping them and then rinsing them in warm water. Iron rust is more obstinate and re- quires stronger treatment, a treauneut, however, that only the most cereal and reliable lauudreme should be allowed to adopt. Indeed, this glare of the work is best done by the owner of the linen. or under her personal superebeou. For ttbe, more then any one else, will see that all needful precautions -lam taken. tihe will look to it that the pan o[ boil- ing water 1s on the rauge ready for im- mediate use; that my the spat itself fa moistened with raid water, axed that not n grain of the salts of lemon that rbc spreads over it in a thin layer and tetthlteft-eteMellarelleatestlesia ll. ane chance fall elsewhere ou the cloth, She -Will see that ttllt ltt`Rmee rinsed in the ta,iliug water and immediately -ex- posed t., the hot sun or pressed with a hot iron. She will be careful to do aA this, because she knows that she is :to - plying a strong amid. and that a hale is worse than a stain. She will remem- ber. too, that the term "salt,, of hi•mt.o' is interesting. for the bkaeh-ism eaaiit - nothing else than' powdered oxalic acid and being a deadly poison, must he tree with care and then be safely stored away. Javehle water will remove all other stains. Linen treated with it also re- quires Immediate end thorough rioting in boiling water, for its strong Iagredienta are chloride of lime and warming soda. It cab be boopbt In drug stores, but it can be matte at bane fiu_leat_ than had the est. Itirertions for its preparation are ou the boxes et chloride of lucre one buys at the grocer's for d.sinfeet:ng pur- poses. Strained off into bottles and corked, it will keep indefinitely, lint aa a safe precaution the bottles should be *belled and narked 'poison" in pro- minent letters of red ink Only the best of laundry soap may be need on noble linens. A.II others will turn them, yellow and pona1WT trot' the ti sl cure brcasse of the free alkali. they contain. The blue used to tint the linen after the Inst rinsing must also.„ae of the best. Stains like iron rust are 'nosed by -the chert.M'at tngrtdientlrof tutelar bine mixing with starch and producing iodide. Frequent rioting. in pure cold water after washing and an oe'asional bleach- ing upon the grnsa in the hot sun will render table linea white and sweet. Lam pa and 'Ihe' r %- .lne. Even young eyes suffer by the use, for resiling or working, of flickering gas. Th. lamp -fare is steady. soft In color and grateful to the eyes. Formerly the clumsy student lamp was the only really reliable one for reading, but the "lamp -analt+saeis-et- new patent burners, all of them good, and ail of them reasonable in price. For a c;upie of dollars one can buy nn excel- lent lamp, complete with green porcelain shade: for three or four dollar' n really handsoene one may be had. Whatever the quallty, Jn shape the reading lamp .hnnM be low, with a good broad bass. s,. that It stand' seenrely. Th, re is no one article in the hoasa. eveepting, perbnpe. goal beds, that can give n' mneh cold comfort r lamps few tending and working by. Eve'ry- grown menet r of the family *honk! possess ,iru'. There afinnld be one of extra Mahe ing power .,n the eb'ldreu's study table. the ebrory and eitting-reom tables. We nil do without many things that we ilii add to our romfort in life, not beenuee we are. (tined to do so, :net from lack of knowledge or thought. it is not wise to mettle olieself, to search ft r new wont., to make new neeetait'e' which anchor i . to one piney. because w: easiest he reenfort*hle .1*ewhere. Tee a 'sermons! lame is a *enash.ie It cavy or int'nig'ence and the 5nemer it heenmes r n^eeusity. the better is our prospect of ri nt'mt«4 rood eyesight. not to attention the ep'.end'd.ravensie ofeomeort en loped h trt"+rl• nP the etre/erg. of our 111,•.— Womnn'e flotne t ompnnion. stn Eraptlimo aged, : t. agate --awes Eczema, Wier, soli rheumy barber'. dee --all imbk,g end havnhgg aka dowses vanish whir. Dr. Ageew'e Odense. is and. it rebores la• da and sero gswkly. Ns efts aelfillatine Min gall oteranatla 6 tpenura:yriboair obi high -prided olnewi wlhsel Wasik try De. Agnew's Oleleue.i a1 E6 assts sod be sore ed. Field hy J. iL. Davi, Armeele A mer1lstessi weft owned ee Moeday'vlshsg,, 60. a1 fi6Tatk the, Gtfsra 11 - wen salted le the bay beets se staeri siuy. Tor the tero of the (!oak. Keep a hriek on the hack M the store, and at the fetal nn it that is to be kept num. Adel a teagawmriti of sugar to every pint of milk when the milk is to be tl:idkened with cerement Make graham breed the mine as white bread, ansi then meant it three hours, Instead of baking it ono. Oatmeal 1s much tmprorteil if sugar i. pat in while 1t is cookies lnsbwd of he int out on It at the abet. Tie a piece o a Ie bread to a white muslin elotli and drop It into the kettle with the biding eshhage, to help abiieb the offendve odor. Never ant poentoea for baking,but fir stesming or 1xrding draw the g,' of e rT�p1 kD fe hall why aromie lengtbwtww, that they will stark opp,t iy. The beet way to ket•p boiled moth frogs bektg Iiwnpy in to stir up the meet with ennngh cold water to merely wet it, •owl then stir it into the kettle of boiling water. Out the thin skip from the onteid! ,.f a leg of motion or the mutton gbups befot'e cooking them, la order to re- move the -woelly east*" chit mss end so oajectionaMo. baking powder is raid tot bis- cuits the.[tor 4i1nt sbenld be enemy, Is setter all the Iagr.dlentil 10. addled, In - *ending the soame and the wip be meek ljg:►1ieg, end Mon Neby. ¢..table"re a. pM a ale* her milk, heatr�8 I v+ir,ri4" sleek the .►a���g t � t�•e•�a •web. tae a+� teAii 1�e `e1111M r ai 'ilii efllel M ! wise. witha hlttd wf b. •K10DeIi ed 8H111T • WAIBTB. The 9ersstt .tilt to Fahr sad le tie woe. 1■ s'arhd Verna.. Seldom has a fashion for women tames of ouch longevity as the shirt waist. Fur revert! asuman women have given- s. sighing farewell to that most comfort- able ferment, and then trinities bare stolen it beck again and served it "as gypsies du stolen children—disguised thew to make 'eta pane" fur new. U'he so-called shirt waist is hardly recognisable in the new fall pattern*. Only the haberdasher chugs to the urigi• use style, with slight yariutiuus. men who make shirts and abtrtwatrts, secustuttled perhaps to the gradual evo- 11 r. r- a- t. os y a d f: 0 y n M aside it ff n be >r she, , e e s e ed Weou in miner apparel, show tar fa and winter wear deingur but slight metiitied from those iu nae les yea The tailor-made shirt waist will bra not the slightest resemblance to the in ported faucywhirt waist For the tail, made broadcloth bids fair to be ti most popular fabric. Plaids will a doubtedly prevail, but out plaid vette The plaid velvet waists, charming they were last autumn, are. ducsu.AI things of the past. In their place is new silk heavier than rand, but ou the order, in plaids of two colors, a soli gruuud and a wide check bee. Rowan silk*, w,utethiug similar to to feta in quality, but woven in briltiuu vari-colored striper ale running our wa ted merging reineoov-t1ke' Into oue an other, are prettiest made elosswire u the goods for rlruder lgures, tad wit the stripe runuiug up ggd Jump stouter women. The plaids a shims invariably cut on the bias. 8.etch. wtnle plaids find favor, being worn with •plai skirts in soi�d color wutch.ug the,1[ iuuv cif the 'Child.- Corduroys semi to be eu tirely tabooed - The "light modification in the cut e the tailor -Made shirt waist 1s most n liftable in to►-- 'mer whish 1. direct from a man's shirt sleeve pattern It is much smaller than the old sheik. end is finished with cuff of the *kir waist material, heavily stiffened with it luterliinug slit and buttonholed for cu buttons. White cuffs will not be worn althougb !hien collars will be. The aur ret•t tie will be the pun iu solid •ulor tor plaid shirt waists, and in plaids, Itom.p atirips. 1L4.1i �aggree for the plus wafita. A tie of W 1te dlk 1ted "puff, and offset with n' -handsome pin, can. worn effectively with any kind of a tai or -made akirt waist. The puff ties quire much practice before they bee`t�w manngealle to the average woman. Bu it is a knot that must be tied, and mb the moat easily discouraged will hart eenetlnpr et_ SAs i. played in the window, as the latter are beyond a1l question is exec•reQk testi. Another feature- of the new tailor wadi- shirt waist is that the tack is swig all the futurism being brought .nrunud t, the trout, and gathered in a narrow yoke that extends well down on th shouldeci, No gathers are math. at th waist. At the belt line in the buck i t tate stew stab sot ween have on arta to slip their ties through at elm ick of the roller. Through thin tales M nun n narrow min -elastic belt, finish with * buckle. This is strapped as tigb as p„asibi' over the waist, and holds the fulness in plate. The imported shirt waist is of a totally different character. Severe simplicity is eutirely done away with. Much gtr- siture is used; as many as three or tour fabrics are eom_bieed Op qac garment The foundation Is shalt the game as before, but to it are added laces, but- tons, ribbons, trills, tucks and plaits. Much of this fancy wear comes direct from Paris. Colors are dazzling, only the most "decided and brilliant ihudee being in vogue. As in the tailor -mune, so in fancy shirtwaists, red—bright ver- million res the popular color, only the one is made of solid -color broad- eloth, to be wont with linen culler ,end Darrow black satin tie, while the other is made of silk. dashed with a satin stripe, aglitter with brass buttons and bedecked at the neck with gay ribbons, the belt being of the waist material iu crushed silk, terminating in a double donkey -eared bow in frost, a little to the loft. The Russian blouse is one of the new- est shapes. It is ninde of alm,wt equal fulness back and front, and puffs out all around about the belt. Small tuck. running horizontally across the waist are conspicuously a feature of the blouse waist. Between these tucks, which are sometimes laid in cluster., the finmwt 'nee is inserted. Another new style cat is made without a yoke, tete back toeing in one piece, tight fitting and seamlea. The frost, which is very full. is made with aruall perpen- -dieehev---testes,--•,icer-tngt tL,-r, - ning across the entire widtk about n finger deep tram the shoulder seams. The model of that pattern b in salmon QQink. It is decorated with cluster band, df narrow black velvet rlfbon, laid eroa*- wise. The crush belt of slit is also out- lined in black velvet, saes the stock cel- lar. Unless the wearer is slender au interlining is used in this kind of waist. This interlining, called a stay, extends trona the underarm steams and tautens snug fitting in front The back is linea only to the depth of the yoke. French flannel waists made in the blouse effect are fathered before and laid in box plaits in the yokeleas bock. Other French flannels in dainty Zen and tight shade plaids have narrow yokes, fall fronts, scant bncke and sleeves, and ire worn with black actin nhepherti girdles, linen collar. armlet tome -in -hand ties, and are finished with a wide pink Meld- ing at each edge a row of tiny fiat hut - tens, placed almost touching each other, and made of the shirt waist material. Corsets, girdles and Belts are smatter' this year then ever before. A reaction seems to have set in from the expensive - nese of the Waist line, due to the freedtm needful in exercise. toes h ttnre.hatilow the deciles et wheeling? -For who eod111 ride eseirried in an eighteen -Inch beetle Nearly all of the rollers made to these Laney waists are detachable, And the in- cr ngrnity of linen collars on silk and lace -bedecked waists promises to he con Boned by feehbn. A plaid rep wool waist is finished with Innumerable full narrow plaiting' of reel cashmere. i'be little frills peep out from l'etweAs the tack. In flashes of rotor ell over the upper part ofk a garment. The sleeves are pointed wrist ■nd finished with the red blade plaiting. A standing linen collar is wore with the., and a ted tettiu, fit aid. tee. teatime belt. TteJ 111W 11t11Rwevy sbdets. lifillneo, models point to a eonHttn- t ace Mthe and Tam - 111R shapes totoi.'d ep at the seas' my cotfnpitroua Get,, cede*, bluish violets Med Russian ggrreeenn which is a deep, rich Meet are undoubtedly the mime. and Steele velvet a Myosin material. All feathers w111) much worn, and there semen little in that oetrts•h. pehIesn• missy and ns * et will all take equal ran 're $. Qelet 10 If .oe. llliat Blab for tailor beettnaes and ah oft s$tnilar mate ata to be eoeiparatively quiet In tone, with touches only of bright color. tad viget'ettt tt►ifs, whips ods. covert cloth none and Bedford ee fa a aasber of variation see be relied ffipla as ertrrect ai 11110 gtTurkish Twists. tirl�l+p 44. it ` hats show ik engi �"ttt:'�. Wi *TT 11Y15t`11t trngw keened . war • bles�entl Aad Wile. Is- a h Rolle hi Bladdery gnome.+ new theory tbal • toes and whsle who byre boas married • greed may years grow to resemble stab other, not only is minor and vNea, has actually as to feature* sad expression. A reeved Dumber of the Illuslrjrie Walt has an snide ou this .upleoi, watch Was that the pboeographto association of Game his quite lately idea inveati0.Ys/ the trutb of this time); by the aid of the mats. The photographs of seventy-slgbt elderly or very sad simples were takes, and as equal somber of family groups. The resile preyed quite .•1W.story to holders of this theory, inststnsob as is Sweatt -five sass, the ressmblaaw between husband and wife was much master [ban that between brother end ester, and in 'kir y case mon it was tully as great. The failure of the other tweedy four old oeuple@ to nabs* the expsctatioas ot t1oss Interested is the scatter s suppeesb•y dos te "moompaebihty °f dtspositton," which time was apparently unable to oombst to its effects. YOUNG LAMONT'S CASE. Neighbors Much Interested in the stay — Every one Thought the Youngster ould Dis, but his Very Much Alive CONNALLY, • Got 4—Hugh lamest, of Motets*, leu a y [ung sou who is an object of interest throughona this whole motion of country. From infancy the boy bad dropsy and was blcattd sod •wullen all over. It seamed to the parents that death could be the only release to one attacked se yams ',veli, d seaw Tbsy beard o1 Dedd's S'dssy faits and began givieg theft to abs child 'Vith the first box the Vastest and swell - Ing began to disappsars,_l sx b,Nes sewed • perfect ours and Ai. boy 1, now just es healthy a youngest'r as stirs up .the dust on the bigh roads et Western Outerio. Morris : Jas. Breckenridge, of 8. 8 No. 10, hu bees re-engaged for the year 1898. Mr. Breoksoridgo me keg a enemata! teacher but hu object 1s the ministry. • DEATH'S CALL. SWEAT. EWA out is Great Beads upon His hos —A Victim of Heart Dteetas Sostobed from the Ware by the Prompt Um of Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart—Relief In all (:ages in 10 Minutes. I).. 41,11Wa ,�S foe tkseart pealetc lr. give* re La within 30 misuses after the arm de* is takes. Jaws J Vfhltely, of Williamsport. Pa, says: "Cold sweat would stand out to resat bead* apes hie faoe, sad I indeed tbooghc that my sad bad owe. Bat relief was found to Dr. Agnew's Cure ler the Hears. After nssog is for a .hors Wm I feel now that the trouble Is .Ito.etber ismevedJP- ltevi/vetosrwanerieaL Sold by .1. C. Davie. DODD'S KID$BI PILLS I have been troubled .th Stone In the Bladder. I heard of Dodd's Kidney Pills' cures, and concluded to try them. I have used 18 boxes, and can safely say they have been the means of removing the stone. I can highly recommend Dodd's Kid- ney Pills to all suffering from this disease. I remain, yours, etc., JOHN MADILL. Shelburne, Ont. Dodd's Kidney Pills Cure Stone in Bladder. PLANING MILL. ESTgstlk$f! 1116. Bllchaaalis & Rh�u SAM �s Wa BLIND Dealers la all triads of LUMBER, LAIN, SHINGLES Aad bsudees seat the of every dewrtptos Bohool Farnitare a $oecialty. Canadian Paci$c -telegraph Patronise Our Stock is now complete and is one of the largest and beet selseted outside tis cities, LOADED SHELLS True Competition. Tia CANADIAN PACIFIC R44aw .v 00 Tager et bas bees established to giro the ppnbbielett• s2atwtaa, ssrvtas with fair sad pr 1510 mssasns�ta t Nnofplms Wit fn the liebereIt as4asarshrt d[ �s rbeaamet of parson who Per game 8tureeib use this gaCent�� ! ifels5uf weilUs pssp =re: 1111.511.:=0 all pofrrat la the Northwest,Olisio-Iso* Cortes sad Poole.Owe t tASCUPW a 9 Mamma 0edewlsb fittfesinton Find= go. Limited. bate ma arrangements with J. BROPHEY & SON, et Wsatet, to carry full line of their good.. The pabl'o can get Furniture at Factory Prices R him. and by doing sa 'keep thea mews blows, and have a goad thanes et Wetting Amam as, It book by .apportion Masse m a Lia All pods of the Company' amnia ass fitly gaarssseed by them CATTLE BROS. Mambas $team.Piti ors Tinsmitlui HAKILZ ON -$T C-od.exich In any quantity to snit the purch..er. Shells loaded with aey charge while you wait. We have a full Stook of POWDER, SNOT, SHELLS, PRIMERS AND WADS. —sea oea aeroox or— MOT eons, They are sure fire but only kill at one sod. DAVISON & CO. THE UP-TO-DATE HARDWARE. WE MAKE_„ Sewer and Culvert Pipes AU Nose Breen 4.a ts. Mb essuieetione WRIT FOR PRhpl$. THE ONTARIO SLIE.1i'. ■ PIPE CO .oi AOl1.�1OU .. oitwrs.v ay antes TSIRONTC MANITOBA . . . FLOUR UDS TN ON 11. MIMMI•111-+- I hawsimam resshsdgar land:t Flom o him Lobe of as oda, Kee - Meet a s.04. ham tbsi arms et the lefts st esti p50465.. This tteles Whist sed is tsaw t• paw seised few West D. CANTELON '3 BI,RY. "`". _ floor aao'M [tot mla spend sow toisoop house.soft M51'"'dime iceket.. a D. CANTELON. Ask yosw Druggist AI A Wonderful Tonic and Rsws.dy tar Weak and Impure Ylioiio Kidney and liver 'T rdk1b1Mb assts►„gauss w • A4aat.issjii. Mwtses.t. emit. *yet ►M` tats, ",44 <,n