HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1890-7-31, Page 8ABANDONED IN TBE ICE. nag and crashing among the ice, showing
• that it was in motion, and I had no idea
which xray to go. If the mate had seen me
Who Strange Adventure of an, Eitguclk fall he had not stopped to aseertaia whether
1Thttler, •4 I was hurt or not. I zatade a. guess as to
On any first voyage across the A*Iasticy which Wray the ship lay, and started out,
beingthen an apprentice in the ship "Dixon,' but I seen found a lane of water to eat me
we sighted a wreck in midocean and a beat off. I tried another direction with the same
was lowered spud a sailor taken from the result. Tlmcn 1. knew for certttiu that I was
derelict. He had been alone only five days, slos* an ;a 'o:
and the weather bad been reasonably fair, About this time the weather ehaoged sated
and yet the loueliness o: his situation had began to grow cold, and pretty soon there
driven hint mat, and he gave out: men a good ; was a flurry of 'snow. Wbile I was terribly
tussle to get him into the boat. If this scared I did not lose all sense.. I piled up a
situation, in Summer weather, right in the : nunaher of ice capes to make a shelter, and
*reek of vessels, with the Sun:sheering thir- t hanging fast to the dead fox crept under
teen hours per day, a a 'a3 enough to drive a !them and found the place quite comfortable.
sailor mad, what must be the surroundings Y I felt that I was helplees, and could only
of one abandoned in the Artie circle:" I hope that the cold would set the ick again,
shall tell Som _!!y story and leave yea to stop my drift, and that I might recover the
judge ship before eald and hanger had finished me.
I was a hale and hearty young fellow of I slept as bit after getting out of the wind,
23 when made the harpooner of boat 1o. 3 but was. awake when daylight came. The
on board the English whaler Search. She iee had ceased grinding, the air was still
was as o t-brndt and well
-mannedm
enne ship, �1
d
and d
frosty, ,an
Ir
knew that
I as "r
oze
min
this was her se ame voyage to the awed* again,an. *limb!n to .the top
of a great 'hum -
after whales. Our 1 e , as we proceeded , meek of iee I looleel to the south to find the
up the'Greenland met, was :all haat email ship within a quarter of a mile of me, and
be hoped for, and there seenme.I no donht in nalf an hour I had conte up with her.
that we should till the ship and be oat of .$he Tested on an even keel, fast frozen
those sees before a sailor's ear was freetielt- ' with great blocks of ice all aroma her. I
ten. On the drat that the cooper announced tired oft" my gun and shouted, bat got nio
us two-thirds fell we laaa-u two deed wheeler auesver., at:< es;en be oaye I stolid onkter leek
lashed alena ide, arid a large school of Ilisi - , I knew that she had been abandoned, The
ing ones were playing within a mile of us. , davit falls were down and the boats gone,
in one hour our lua4 claanahed eihrtp" *tidy while a box of l•read, a far cap, a musket,
abont. First, and eeen ingly without rt aga,a, and setae (.live things were left on a targe
the la.ah n i of the ilia whale en the port Meek os hes. When l got aboard the evil-
.i.le sual lily gave wag, and the Lich ewes o as 8 t at scale and
SANK 1.1t.rA SPINEZ, a rtAST1' Al*i=lTTt't:k
There were eon.i�.lerable , a. at the time, and ;'a1ere raor, numerous, 1 scan eencl•
atdetl that
as this fellow let go the weigh of the other s„gaeeae ofthe neehacl unveil the ship out of
rolled the ship almost on her beans ends, Per clip anal had given her such a cant that
and the lasitin- s had to be east off to right a her eruw furcal elle W45 11014-140. The field
iter. The rate on &leek Melted away cis sit I/:l.lh she w:ws #razcn had at the eagle time
she rolled, and one frail was killed and two split up, atua1 WLae the nten had drifted away
badly hurt. 'We were Labr,.'ing to emote' 415 0nlz :roe, the abandoned Ship hail gone
• .the whale again when a eenell carton up and withaualbea:
poppet at us as you might lire a On. 1;0 "There was a reason to believe that the
one had noticed its *posting, and though it a adriftedttire iyrcty wagi.1 return, Tana et,nhl not
acus over in ten inimutes,rlatnaged rte more havo nnan): utiles and would at ono
Haan a three -days' gale might have tame.take:aadvanta; a ot the new iee to retch the
ti� a had to let go the 'Whale, and it teak us ship. Holtlins to this view, I replenishes)
fully a tsar to make repairs. ; the fires, which were not yet out, tilledthe
That slay was the turning point inthehis. cook's enppars with merit to boil, anil then
tery of the voyage. It seemed as if the : tired rna} z1.:ast,t:t at intervals of five urinate
wholes had dial from those Waters in terror, s�.� ��zQ ra light
dark ;lit faded away
for we dint not, see smother mitis the ninth : g ' to the saaasthead n} a *sight
day, Then it would have hem Netter had b aeon, awl turned in feeling posative teat
we civet hint a wido birth, 'Two heats I wwtenal,l air the Whole ships i zunpzny liv
ware lowered to give: him chase, :Avid after ' lancsrnnn • 14 wag EMI raext t4;►' befure
leading them a leng tiistauee and fiursaallr Dae- weell plasty cup that I w1S to he left clone,
dug struek. he tatted said ameba al rand of, anti testa iD•asa later, wilco the fault beeline
them 'theami killed moot her Brew outright. mop *amain. I ways atrnaagly tentpteal
On this wenn ne day we met another w :Miss to commit anetafr. 1 IAA written a letter
comma„ doom finch tut, north. 4e was tit 1t� left hind tate', end hail a gun leaded
chanes~ sn1D running over with oil algal bane, i ttw blow ear lirainsout, when aeiranunet duce
and rept,: tell whales as plenty a hundred I u enrrt,l 10"re 55Pthe sunup in me. 1 had
:Wiley further up. Her l'apttatn eantionvil gene- oda dteek by the davit falls, though 1
us, however, that the short :#retie stunner w'oa5h1have venao5Uateal by lichfureehains. On
was on itS last legs, anti that we rarest harry a her pfaa't *quarter was a great mass of iee,
Malar bllsinee s get oast beton she ke Leg= ; four sett higher than her rail. This was a
to make. Aefur the old iee, drittinh ds•wsa) Part 44 the he d she had rested in. Aa.1
Waith tIr c+wrenpts into the .\tDantia•, thee
went on 'h k to take a last look around 1
was tat c er an hour that bergs or flees were , got an awful fright. Two big polar bears
not ineigint. ('apt. Lord II -1S neither eon. were preparing to board the ship by way of
anted ns'r•pi r'hcaried. Every Haan r,ls s:srai t the m3z.s, and their *scree grewia and aril-
was pecuniarily interested in the voyage,It it tetaeirt set tile in a tremble. The idea
and he celled us aft and put it to vats of Owe heasts eating my body, even after
.lt it ei
1 pigs
whether we ehattltl bra further. north and , tali re rlag-araTlt as taut once baltiah
take our t'hauces or iritise to the southwardl! all future. thoughts of suicide. •
and hope for Lean while !lure to he elear of ! 15 ha! night came the bears stilllin 'eyed.
the ice. The crew :,veil to go math. We r. Melted o myeelf in the tablet and heart titem
only wautt a fear or five 1.g tisk to till taut rwanatairel about in the deek g'angwaysaud
last barrel and samara aavty for 11050e, and making I1eI'sistent efforts to break into the
• it w is nate only the tie st.,iays of aeptenther, alt,1, lr.stee. It was after miduight before
In the Tate,erdini ten sla}a we captured "they wentawayv,asulnext dayImattep�repua-
but one -wit ale and that a small nue, Val l tons t./ repel l.itsardtrs. Itwasnrot daynow,
mites pb•nty of titans, but they were exceed• hat ti.e€,is+asu had brought continual twi-
uat iy wild, givin c the heists many a long !Md. ht. 1 et tat work to cut the hummock
rind fruitless pull." we were new nil Leper. a away from the p9rt quarter, but after work -
mg fin the West coast of Greenland*, sand s.►g ter twat letters with a n no I des ided to
there was every sign of a cba age. of seasons, err sow st'r. In* the tools at hand I sunk
(nee more the twit were called aft, ansa it a shaft down eeven or eight feet,. tilled a
Was voted to hung on for faaur days longer i Prom jug with blasting powder, and then
aid then soluare ;.w ay for pique. In les.: arranged a slow match anis was ready. I
than two hours a gale l,reeeal up from the t tp€eted the iee to tl about in a lively
northeeet, the air was tilled with suowtl tl.ee, manner* but the • deck house would live nse
and we were lying -to anti Shelter.•
: I was within :. minute of iirirrgtbe
i tram w.lcu I heard a great swilling and
ort;zt`c t P Tlr)t iT•T;t 's 'E �a. i u ,,w ie , line l o1 the two
again our tis eame
crest
mold; uudIt wee wtl,• ci 1ti�e mere* ur hours
fre the rit down �lale . of the hummock to look dwn upon me. I
low freezing point, aria wo Isar to fret out their growelled mdwanrT"weio:evidently cbuttintendinghey si
our winter elothing.�ti a still had plenty r
of time, providing everything worked well, To spoil:u TUE Shia
but everything seemed to work against as.
The weather came off thick and squally, , again. I now ignited a rnatcii set tire to
contrary winds prevailed, and when we had the fuse, and waiting as long as I flared to,
worked Clown almost to Upernavik we got ! ran into the deck house. I was hardly
a rousing old tempest, whieh lost us ail we under cover when the explosion came and for
haat gained. On the afternoon of the tSith : thenext half minute piecesofice were clatter -
clay of September the wind alien entirely' ing on the board roof es they descended from
away, the mercury began to fall, and that
night as the ship drifted about• eve. felt that
we had taken the chane s andIost. Next
morning we were Tying frazen in. The ice
stretched away as far as we could see, and
was strong enough to bear a man's weight.
A smart sea would have broken it up in no
time, but for- the next twenty hours there
was hardly a puff. of wind. 'When it did
come it headed us off again, and it was no
•surprise to the men to be told one morning
that the ship would have to winter in the
ice. We drifted slowly toward the Green-
land coast with a great mass of ice, and
when the shore ice was reached we cut a
slip, warped the ship into it, and had then
done all we could toward making her safe.
Look in any direction you might, the sight
was the same—ice in heaps and ridges and
hummocks, with never.a sight of water or a
level spot.
Next day after getting the ship into her
clock we got out a landing plank on each
side, hoisted out a lot of spare lumber from
the hold, and proceeded to build a rude,
stout roof over most of the decks. Every-
thing aloft was made secure, and every
crevice and cranny which could be stopped
against the cold was made secure.. In those
days Arctic whalers went provided for such
a mischance as this. We had lots of lum-
ber, fake doors and window sashes, plenty
of fuel and provisions, and there was no
reason to believe that we should suffer either
mentally or physically. On the fifth day 1
I went off with Mr. Lainpson, the first mate,
on a hunting expedition. Foxes had already
been- seen, and the sight of something we
believed to be a bear was what started urs
off. Daylight now lasted but a few brief
hours, but the weather was calm and the
cold had relaxed several degrees within a
few hours. We die? not intend to go over a
niile or two, and we slipped away so tlnietly
that only few knew of our departure.
to• We shot a fox within half a mile of the
ship, and soon after that roused up a half-
-
grown bear, which fled before us. T don't
think we were over two miles from the ship
in a straight line, and we bad not been
absent over two hours when we heard her
signal for us to return. This was done by
,niscHARazvt; rnnsx MUSKETS Widower (to undertaker)—" What 1 Yon
in rapid succession. We knew that there say the funeral costs two hundred dollars ?' I
must be.grave reason for giving this signal, wish I -had known that before."
and we at once pushed for the ship. We Undertaker-" Your said you wanted your
were leaping and scrambling over the hum- wife buried in a stylish manner."
mocks when I got a base fall, striking on any : Widower—"Yes, certainly; but two hun-
head and shoulder, and lying unconscious dred dollars ! Why, I would rather have
for perhaps half an hour. When I came to had no funeral at all than to have to pay
night had set fn; there was a great grind. .;,;pt amount."
their flight. la hen I opened the door and
looked out the hummock was gone—levelled
far below the rail, and the bears had taken
to flight.
I now realized that I must pass many long
weeks alone, surrounded by darkness anti
various dangers, and I mapped out a pro-
gramme to be followed. I had breakfast at
8 o'clock A. 1•I. Then I worked at clearing
off snow and ice until 10. Then I read
until noon. From 1. to 2 I got up coal and
overhauled stores. At 2 1 had dinner.
From thence till 4 I read, From 4 to 6 I
looked after some fax traps I had made, and
nearly always had a pelt to take care of.
From 6 to 7 I practised on the dumb bells.
At 7 I had supper, and between that and
my bed -time I studied the charts of several
seas we had abroad, and learned to locate
various islands and countries. I held to
this programme very rigidly, knowing that
I might go mad if I allowed myself to brood
over the situation, and thus I slept soundly,
preserved a buoyant spirit, and constantly
gained in flesh.
In January there was a move of the ice
which lifted the ship fairly out ofthe water,
but after an hour she settled back without
damage. By day and by night there were
tremblings and shocks and thunderous re-
ports, but I got used to them after awhile,
and was not greatly disturbed. It was at
noon on the2ndday ofFebrnary that a sledge
drawn by dogs came close up to the ship,
and two Eskimos made long survey of it,
waved their hands, and shouted to me as
they went off. On the 7th two sledges ap-
peared bringing our Captain, mates, and two
harpooners, and four days later all our old
crew were on board. I was correct in my
conclusions as to why they had abandoned
the ship. They lefther hurriedly, expect-
ing her to go down, and had drifted almost
down to Upernavik, when discovered by
natives and piloted ashore. Later on sledges
were sent out; to search for the ship, and
after many fruitless journeys she wag final-
ly sighted, and when the spring break-up
came we got down into the Atlantic with
scarcely an adventure worth recording.
The Way. he Felt About I.
MA NG UILI LOTIL
The Ways of '•aiauufacturing This imports
ant liottsehold Article.
The ¥ Imam at the Pump..
Milkmen are mach the sai»e all over the
world in their attempts to Ian off upon the
public as much water as they Can tlrsguise.
The body of oileloth is what is called On the l;oulevard de Magenta recently, at
burlaps, made of jute and imported from air early hour in the morning, two policemen
'Scotland. This coarsely -woven fabrie is came upon one of these purveyors of lacteal
limp, and is stifl'ened ley being passed fluid busily filling up the cans on his cart
through a mixture of starch and gine and from the pump—and with suck stuff,. too'.
over hot roller's, .coming out, it may be said, /Owing to the drought, most of the water
laundered. It is then ready for the riot used in Paris is for the present taken from
machine, where it is given the body. There the Seine, and its quality may be gathered
are four gaaaalitles of oilcloth, depending ou. from the fact that in the publie eclioois
the number of body coats of paint. That orders have been issued that none is
whieh is to be the best quality receives Ave, to be employed for drinking purposes
'or six coats; the poorer grades, a less num- ,' without being fi
S lteied. The constables
her, The eloth, neves twent -five ehpallen ed themilk t, Aquarius, well you
inp� y yards8 r quarius, who
long by two yards Wide, is dried in racks relied eourteonsl y • Ah . ,
whieh are constructed in tiers of twenty. h>arefalrly caught me this time. Julep up
The factory has a rack capacity of ,on my cart, and I will drive you to the
11,000 square yards, The tbrekness of police office, to save you trouble." This
each eoat of paint is governed by a amiable invitation was refused: by the ser-
steel kui£e, in manipulating which a'yeet s de rine, who ordered the delinquent to
workman becomes so proficient that he come out of his cart and walk with then*,
Tart t h i u
ran tell nearly . 1 to the palatal What a piece :Instead of coin 1
yp p rn he whipped p}d n his
h
i of cloth will weigh when the coating hose and attempted t oescape.t cops sth r-.
, process is eompleied, Three ,etch at a able risk orae of the constables seized the
pint maehi»e can turn out in a day one,'animal's head, brought it to a standstill, and •
hundred pieces containing fifty square arrested the delinquent, who. along with bis
yards each. The operation of eeatirag the "mixture," was marched off to the station. •
first quality elotis oeenpiee a week, as T ae umesnal incident collected a large
each coat res ui!•es. twenty-four hears haulm -Aber of speciators, chiefly work':eople,
• which to dry. It is then sent to the rule, whose remarks to the erring milkman were
bin; »maehine, where suraaees coated with farzrcna complimentary.
$ glue and sand pass rapidly over the lids
withal is to he printed. ridding it of all.. ... ........ .
• irregularities. The better qualities are
w
wS le a n Si.'Q :. e 8
ft atwl "r aelltn ex � h� it .''�S
a cr tdt c tat -lint wlac <' ,t. .
c
p.
, tl.
.. ready a �. r t •S,
they`taw, for the fluters. This re ., ti
d;. g r t the,, School -Teacher.. ,Jit
Iraan'i
>
most interesting part of the operati°'rr, �,tla,: wvoril metre mean?
For every color in the pattern to lie treas. ;. dainty, - ss A. ineaasnre
aloes
:'erred to the ollclott. there must be a Meek. ' Selmol.peareiaer, is NOW, Johnny', what
Thee bloehs come front Maine, They are do they pleasure with the metre ?
about two inches thick, two feet square, Johnny. t: Gas, electricity, water, awl
and are composed of several layers of wood. poetry,
The surface to be used is of maple, crossed
and recrossed by »arrow ;reaves, which
form a surfaeo of small squat'Ks, 144 of them Rather Revert,.
to the square Web. Those squares look like.
and are in reality, so many° pegs. Where • eau s mitt?` ldiegusteti with her country
the left standing, tthose4on thto e portionpegs
a the;,a usan in t! plaro you, toy dear, there'sntwt
surface which is not to be printed front taller from town. "But you saki you
being eut away. The styles in patter» Played in a whist club; surely there are some
change twice a year, .,once are deSliflics in ,gentlemen In that
L tie s. and otnera conte from Fliiladelphia? ;lila li.ittrr, "No, i»decd ; not one; they
and New York, Some patterns coutainrng are all learned men,"
many' colors require from twxnty-five to
thirty blocks, mud consequently' that nuns-,
her of irnpressioao, to reproduce the d
eats lt,.
Rugpatterns are the most iditilault to nig •e,';
as it requires different blocks for the ear. '
ners, sides, and the centre..
Valuable Discovery.
The y.articlesa of any ketal in cooling are
supposed to take a definite crystallized ar-
rangement. Beat, in a crrtai:t souse at least,
is as to the atoms a disintegrating or repel-
lant paver, and, under gI-tat force or pres-
sure, crystallizations may he compelled to,
rearrange themselves on new liuesor submit'
to a chane in form. In drawing wire, for'
example, the force applied is in the direction'
assumed by the fiber, as softened by heat,
and its strength is supposed to depend upon
this arrangement of particles compacted
more or less by the filo througlt'sv1at t it was
drawn.
Now, roiled •olD d wi c is y , t
cess, as the compression of molecules oth
eltanges their form of arrangement and form
b
o'
few`*.
r s alli:,at n period
o
to. Up u
cutnrd
1 I
heat eras always summed to be a prime fee-„
tor in the process, and that without it no;
alterations in what may be styled graunla-
tion was poet ble. Now a Chicago ;taper
announces a change in manipulation that
completely eappotles the old theory. Lars
of cold steel are as easily rolled into wire as
if the metal, were bot, and not only that but
the process nearly doubles the tensile
strength, That w.f (rot -drawn steel wire is
,6,460 p'eunds to the square incl*, while cold;
roil is kl.;,8ut) pounds. What is the nature.,,
of the changed arrangement of particles that
ps'oduees Snell results 1 It must be com-1
pression that forces the atoms into new
forms, or compacts them more elnsely to-
gether, and yet one elFeet of compression is,
to evolve heat, The faun of added, strength
is abundantly vouched for, but the reason of
it remains to be explained. s1auifestly- if
wire can be rolled from et Id bars with such
results, why may not steel plates for ships
or other purposes h yea, why not even rail-
road bars? If these taings are possible, with.
strength doubled and cost d/minished, this
man ufacturiug industry is certainly on the
eve of a total revolution. Science, too, has
added to its domain the wealth of a new dis-
c•,very whose value is beyond estimate.
Gains on any line of advancement, as all ex-
perience proves, are but a prelude to }greater
gains, su other or shnilar lines. The ending
of a beginning in what is new now isbeyond
the ken of the wisest.
An Interesting Present,
It way be presumed that one of the most
interesting presents made to Mr. Stanley
and his bride last Saturday was the gift of
Col. Gouraud. This was a phonograph, one
of the most wonderful of its kind, and made
to contain spaces for hundred volume voices.
Not as a piece of curious workmanship, how-
ever,
ever, will it be chiefly interesting, but in
what it crntaius and will be able to tell. It
was the silent, impassive, unconscious wit-
ness on that auspicious occasion of all that
was said and sung, of all that organ pealed
or wedding bells proclaimed. And what it
heard it recorded with flawless and unre-
lenting truthfulness. It has gone forth from
that wedding scene charged with a wonder-
ful story. In time to wine the happy pair,
whose launch upon the matrimonial sea
took place amid so much splendor and
demonstration, can in the quiet of their
home rehearse the interesting features of the
important event. Their truthful witness
will be able to repeat the welcome of the
bells, the swelling notes of the organ, the
voices of the choir. It will be able to tell
word for word the language of the marriage
contract, and the names of the signers
thereto. It will contain the good wishes of
the American friends of the great explorer,
and of those who are not so far away. It.
will, in short, tell the story of the wedding
as no other witness has been able to describe
it, and of this story it will never grow
tired telling. No doubt Mr. and Ivirs.
Stanley will cherish this curious gift as one
of their peculiar treasures.
ulmANY MAN
Wbo is Weak, Neflentfe, Debilitated,
N whoia kia Folly wtl Bitters nce has Trio
1 fled &I 7 bis Vigor sst Cody !Rand sad
M oc/d, c4 nam -o eZ anssytnFa &igloo upann
anttalis se �tfo. Ache.
9aakaol�lo, w41ti•.aeras, �e $KTIOas-
1 Monera, tiaelifulneo. to 000401y,
tlntniea n the Feeeaud,Ali eta wept*
i sadlug so Early_ Decay, Ccsn un ptlon
tt Initenity, wdl£nt Jia our• spectre' :to. 23 a
a0sltive Cure. inz arts Youthful
' fear :Mira
tlta Vital Powor hi old and
.
1onns!)!. atieagllseatl Mira 1u7 �aratea die Drain
d Nonose breads up tit mase* tar cater:
n arouses rata atesten the whole phpal.al
i auercp ot the human tante. With our a;•edge
Ma tee tete meii obstinato caw 'Aube cured in
three =oaths, awl moat ones In less Haan, thins
day,, Each pecra"e eeeta1as two wet Iza moat
utast; Prtae i3 Grures Gnrrantee& Urr spew:
Me o No. Sal is as infallible Sure for all Preeete
Dlseaaes nomatterot how long atund-
!d t
q Sold under ods wr.ttcn is
l a
� 4I r to
qE' ua n a
caecaM1 T` •�
• Pzioe .43. ,•rxiw�cwl,i. •
Co.. Tor'oata sum.
+� LADIES ONLY. -mots
FRENCH REGULATION PILLS.
Fur superior to Ergot, Tansy. Pennyroyal
Oxide. Endorsed by the thousands cwt adies
who nse them ftaNTIfLY. :fovor n:11, Rolteve
Eslap INSURE REOW.ARFTY, Piesasant and
ffectual. Price, $2, Toronto medicine Co,
Toronto. Ont.
In the Sohool•of Journalism.
Professor. "I again call your attention' to
the too common use of trite expressions. Mr.
Quills, can you not find a fit substitute for
the wall -worn phrase, 'he died a natural
death'?"
Mr, Quills (about to graduate as managing
city etiitorialcorrespondent.in-chief). "Well,
sir, I suggest `he died without medical ail.'
How would that do?"
Professor. "It is excellent, Mr. Quills."
No Oloud Without a Silver Lining,
Lady. "Are you not rather small for a
nurse ?"
Bridget. "Oh, that won't make no diffees
once, mum ; the baby'li hurt hisself les-
when'I let him fall."
q)R. W. H. GRAHAM,
198 King Street Westa
Tor Onto, Onto,
TUXES °IIIMO DISEASES—and i
attention to Si list DISEASgS,as PS—and 'Rees Specie
S, Pimples, Ulcers, etc.
PBIyATE DISEAUS—arid Diseases
Nature, as Impotency, Sterility Varleocele of a PrivateDe-
bility, eta, (the result of ' zcs s,) Gleet
and Stricture of long standing.naI folly and excess,] Gleet
SEs. O><
.-
DISFA
WOMEN—Painful. Profuse or Sup.
pressed Menstruation, Ulceration, Leneorriroes, and al
Oce I;ogra . d ant- to s P.m. I)isplaeemnents of the Womb.
Sundays.1 na-us, to 3 p.m,
Teter Lumber Yazd
Tha Undersigned wishes to iaforuthe public iiicaporal that 1 .
fi to keeps
constantly in et ck
A .
Kinds of BUILDING C MAiERIAL
DRESSED OR L'rTD
t iVSSSl♦D.
si large stock of i1etnlocl. always on hand at mill prices. Flooring Si i
dressed -,-inch, inch•nnd-n• master, inch -and -a hall and two inch. Sash Boom Mouldings and all Finishing 1rIator stl, Lath, 47c.
StlINULES A SPECIALTY.. --Competition challenged. The best
largest stook, and at lowest rices. ShinS and the
„„Fl,'11.tiVSii1. S*111.
! gym! rally for use. No ahri'nka
assured.. A call Trill bear out the above,
HE OLD ESTBUSHED
Ell' Jaz „Willis Mena er
3� �+ `�+• epi Gti t.A. �1ti ^`t
toe' lee
o� 3 �q4 opo .eo9� 00.
LQ 44:”.NCf'tC����w P,T�
01' 0174
e P,,0 cam
Iafaet mince only by Th.,txu Ilcllowsye, 73. Now Oxfer4 utrcet,
Imo at*, oxford atrro:, twelve.
lve.
,:
P s altaY6r
s >tlroald look to the Zabel o
4Lbt!$a>:At
nod POLE
o ealilrors is not 03, Oxford Street, /midge, they aro spurious.
V t Thr" 'O.E .OLSSISa • i'ermacent , -
tlous guaranteed, Salary and S:xpcueea ]:'std, ear
liar adranta¢estobeginners. Stock oown;,sere,with len-sellingsnealantea
ex/7Fr i, lebtxx. ;Fe Wamntee alae we advsvff,a. Write SiBo WJ(
sIxt '1,1F.1ts3. ;Vaasa: ,mien. 'Toronto. Oat. lTtwtn house Is reliable./
JOHNTT,,t� ^^3� qq '
,1,_(� .ice til 1 1 r.7
Indian Pa e Ale and XXX Brown Stout
Highest awards arta Medals for Purity and Excel
lence at Centennial Habitation, Phil adelphia,
1870; Canada,1876 ; .Australia, 1877 ; and.
Paris, France, 1878.
TESTI: ON/ALS SELECTED:
Prof, ii It Croft, Public Analyst, Toronto, says:- 't And it
to beperfectly sound containingno impurities or adulter-
atioes, and can stronglyrecommend it as perfectlypura,and
a very superior malt iquor."
Jobn Ti Edwarus, Professor of Chemistry, Montreal, says:
.�
I Sndthem to be romarlsebly salmi alee, brewed from
puremalt aud.hops.
itov.P J.Ed.Page. Professor of Chemistry Laval 13u ver
sity,Quebec..Says :—"'IInceanalyzed the Indian Palet&lo
manufactured brJobnLabatt, London. Onttaio, and have
lonnd it a lightale, containing but little alcohol, of a deli-
cious flavor,.and o! a very agreeable taste and superior
quality, and eampares with the best imported. ales. I have
whieh is of ooxc 7lentiter XXX quality; itStout, oir the
very agreeable brewery,
itis a tonic more enervate than the above ale, for It is a
little richer Inalcobol, and elan he compared advantage-
cnsly with any imported article.
ASK YOUlit *ItOCER i'OB IT.
eintzman& Co
MANUFACTURERS OF
rand, Square PUpright
PIANOFORTES.
The Oldest Manufacturers in the Dominion.
Seven Thousand Pianos Now in Use.
The Heintzman Pianos are noted for:
Their Full, Rich, Pure Singing Tone, a
Their Finely Regulated Delicate Touch,
Their Perfectly Even Well Balanced Scala
i
The Whole Composed of the Choicest Material and of the Most Thorough Workmanship
Send For Illustrated Catalogue.
-•ue.
FactoryJullctioll
�@iarer®®ms and Arca,
-West Toronto
11101R•01\41-711101
'� "'��i''�'''� king -St. ��5
Jo
!