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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1891-11-26, Page 2TIES, HUMAI r — '""t t to tall papa everytlai.ng obeli I see him. A hys f alittewhlteedeee fr clo ties. GpoyI\[J b •a for a little while, cleasFrederick. I ra for you always, I think of you always,— With constant love, 1 am, ever yours, "To :In. G. PARTON, WF.S1'IIINISTF,R PAL A('E, FROM .all:. HALDANI., MANOR BALL, Curfll.P,zt71I PARE. "Sir, ---Information has reached me that The First Lillis —Supplied Ify 31r.1. 11i1i;ton. of Shepherd's Basil. ) your ion,. Frederick Parton has taken '� - advantage of my ai7seuco during my dangle- ' ter's. visits to London to pay his addresses to her without -my knowledge or sanction 1 IZ 1111, L, F.itRJ EO:Y. Author of "Great Porter Square," "The Mystery of M. Felix," "Bread and Cheese and Kisses, t4, .l♦te, CHAPTER XXVIL---(Coxrzxrse) •magical bead to perform a miracle with you such eoutiuot tsscattdalous, atadttnlaeco7ntn�* Noir, me dear father, I want yea to let and me), I draw. a *lure of myself es 1 ant, a gentleman, and hearing of it now for the * r which 1 think will surijrise you. f?rst time I write to yon without an hour's me ?t&otv all about env dear Agnes—how ., NoN what shall 1 s:, toyou, m ' t she so, what she segs, how she soaks, et y y delay to put a stoputo the proceeding, I cetera, et cetera, et -cetera, i� teat docs site - ltarli7tg girl, hots shall I write, I, lilies Who=' understand that our son is In one of the think of my d',ary of the passage across the ti`kle fortune has not yet smiled? But there ` Australian (mimes, and that he had the pre- seas, Heavens ! Whet a waste of waters . astsme, there is time. I am in a Toni Tidaller's •sumption to open up a correspondence with divides us ! Rut nook forward. I look for., ground, and every day I he of men draw- ing grand prizes. It will be my turn one day ; ward, and am not in the least discouraged. As ,you know, I have bound myself to write �t Must be •my turn, for 1 have you and levo to her o e- nce in every six months, and theis, dist my daughter. If I were acqueinte:t with his preclseaddress I should write to him di- rect•, to the saute effect as Taut writing toyou, y side, and the cilarin will be sure to I ted. The truth, then, will darling, that t Idemand Ins ressto him mytoponion of his L am no richer at this moment than conduct �v irla a first term is not expired. There he nothing; shat to prevent you sending her my letters to when I first set font on these shores, Tam ', h I repeat, is not the conduct you, and she wili know from them that ray in mood health and I do a lose of a gentleman. I have views for my dough- h I shall not allow him to ABATT'S LOON ALE Aij S1.OT, ..NWARDED GOLD UM AT INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION. Only t o14 Medal love is h d h not intend to se h l acne aR•4,e , that, is can nevercltanud e, Delft L• p early to the moraine working ter with 1,l.• rc and iiia, tI-e ono dear ho. a of m Life Is to interfere. 10 r u at .the_notemit as fa c 1 , will n tt 1 ,..tm ;?z 'est est i u n the �. �� ofthose ca. 1 c t h e 1 her wife.p•.:. Tell her that I am going to around tut never for ttinthat I am a test pay rtai,C to t ieuvs in wt;iclt rag daugh- be prat ieel. Fortunes are Mein' made on 1 ' h' 1= tee's welfare is tenet*ned, and eo the carry. one dor her. Theta I can ass; her father for in my mane,. I have a cornratao (the cal t . pInc , y his consent to our union which I am con y your son's „dress hithe ce-oaties, and your concurrence to my dement that the amides - tine intimacy shall instan'ly eerie, I are, your obedient servant, the goldfields. I snail go there, hake gent entan, w rip rme, your ear name as a ing of them& out in the way I deem most charm, and going to sloe p with -y our mare •° 8nttal)19. F,x ectin to receive from mu - ' scions I cannot do, with any chance 0f sue- them matesout, here , and we manage tofind enough gold, to Kee us, but there fa the cess, while I reanain neon. I bane the fulte'.t chance every ggold f fielding a hat; nugget or faint in 11E''''' as slag 11",,4 in me. teed Bless trikitig archatch.' A. sa r w hhad ad her, awl you, my dm father. Address your letters to the post office in this- city. --'Dour been Working for four &tenths. and whoheti Atlzetienate ROU. I^1tii,i i:t: i:." "1' -.'t C. l r;Tot:, IV i:Sr ilri,;TF:n PAL VIE Ra%1', 7.) Ferner:!, h PAI;T•tti, I 0., 1'OST °neva, Iltnt:DRN, Orel;°, New Zee- L.SNL. "My dear Boy,—Your otir two letters, one from Australia, the other Omit New l:•al:tnrl, with the diary you kept on the passage out, have been safely de/it .e.9, and 1 reply to them by the drat opportunity. Iser-t them to ;amiss Haldane, l'Ii alieigh Park, under coyer to Tisa Reehel !) pr.tse, in ac. ordauco with year directions, and I have received whit i, she desires me t o vete r from herrEIelve snide Mica ndeushe vao herss tier race. and whisper dI woo to the acrdseeds yoeiasmany Muthriiam:teesastile'invisible goddess. 'For my dear girl's fondest love could desire. You ail; too to • sake• come, now, for thesakeot the dearest, tell you clow she ie, how the I.aks. and dearest girl in the world, l" I give you my irls:tt site sa'�s. Sate says she is well. ands ward that I utter these words in my mai: writes us you do, claceri7alty anal 11(17: milt. c * tsing aWaents, tend that I ga tow.ar's. a4_:tin but I have no meads of dEs N•.verinA hytty sue' refeshed att.1 streratttened by thein, with Mr. t c �7•n•'e o boas. h � , t t. n that v' s. aant • cast will noth lr. Rialsti l n a /1 to Hallow e t ..7 11 arod;n'ai G Ina, it 19 p ls' true, but as wileas the waste of waters lie- III vain. lige I.vc in a tent line the Furl- tweet:Fon and l.7 rarchs of old, a Mai simile for at no yell • t eaeat iter7;e tvh�n logo you � a y the glut' between him ane, me. At no time of .great diistasct from us is a sheep and cattle life were lie ant I on terms of very friendly. 8"1.417 n where I am : W.Iys wele.,nle—I "I"intin7acy, and n;ar circumstance; being so there semetnues of 1 Sema?ay, a. wetter of different, i" is by no clans probeb'.c that of twelve miles, easily done oa time soft hush his seeking. we should be i ruultt nearer to roods in three hotra—the owner of which, eaout atilt levitation n to would be 'court nt and Cl selark with- an l 11sE eeipi.t3 myself, AcIg e master ns his an`- atlYamat. and WO0! 1 not a•iv enc . your cti�aae, urn :es flocks i think of bibbed days ween Wore Agnes to ply an .titer visit to Louden, berth welted Rebecca, but 1 apo not want to and to stop, .as she diel on her erevioue wait se long for m dear girl. Words are visits. with irietpla who du not thin!: lessof poor to express allyl feel ; dearly as I loved tit be•otts••e we are not viol, I should be able you V 1110 I loft Eugkind I We you still to see her anti to chat with her about you : mote dearly now. k'•U are mnvgotta genius, but she Ellyn welting of a -water/TWO; my g"ud ant/el, ever Ity my 3i11e. 1 w:ailt reit, and I judge front br.rei:eneca tlhatthere with you tittough the woods, I sit en a fat - is little probability of an early meetinn. lint tree nud talk to put, your epiritis in my You know ,tow foils anti „ mphttoy 1 ciy»- heart. Think of me altvayn as your true teetmeo with you in yam hoposof the fnutre and faithful Inver, who mover lays hla head been so unlucky as to c me to his last bit re ' bum,' steldeniy plumps upon whet is eall- .1 a ' pocket' of coli. Presto ! In three weeks he rakes four thousand ounces—just think of it !-,and ofi' 11e goes !tome to settle down with his old mother and his sweet• heart in Wales. A miner from Cornwall, similarly unlucky, all at on'ee ;rive'. hispiek into a nest of nuggets, pull birth; large and email, and sends money home to brio; his people out to the co:natry where he has made his furtu;te. So y -nu see, my darling' girl, it is only a matter of time; the longer good fortune lea -coming, the brighter is her and I shalt say nothing to cast a cdut low ami upon his pillow without thanking toil for them. There are youthful dreams which the priceless blessing of your love. My happily come to fruition. May yours be of that nature I Your account of the two pictures yon painted is arousing, anti going; nut as you have done to a new country with practical intentions you are wise in your resolution to throw aside the inrush, and engaging n dear girl, sloes your father know? Howe you told hint yet" Keep nothing from neoe lie cannot ohjeet to me on the score of birth ; it is only that dreadful bugbear money, money. money. I will work and wait for it, and you shall hear from methat our wishes are realised. Do not doubt it those pursuits in which money is most easily darling. I do nut. heaven guard and made. I am afraid I have n et b}e:n wise in shield you and keep you bright and happy your education. With my own example he- till I hold 7011 in my arms. Withnuilyhag fore the --•a failure as an artist,whatever aficetion, believe mo, ever your fa•thful lover. FREDERICK. " Fnou AGNEs HALD iNE,CIICDLEIotI 1.'<\r.I„ TO FnEDEI;i.tic PARTON*, NEW ZEALAND. de and 1. hope for tate hest. Lam painting two me happy, dao happty beloved,—Yourve Ireadl itsopictures for the Academy -..is not that a many times that I must know it by heart, proof that I have still with me hope, your but I keep on reading it, for it brings you tarry, and I do not intend to beat a retreat from the ranks in which many better men nearer to me. I have not the gift of g writing lone letters, and you must be con than I are struggling . Cherish that fairy, tent with a short one, with all my hear* in my dear boy, always open your arms and h. I blame myself very often for being the your heart to it ; whatever the result it will cause of your leaving England, and going so brighten your days and nerve your arm. Exile well I remember my that Academy I far away from us ; if it had not been for me and I ,You would have remained at home with your picture t It is a good many years ago, can cunni on my augers the number of my i father, who must feel the separation very mission since much. Do not be away too long, but be pictures that have gained ad or a that time. I have told you the story s lone,ora shortt whether will he true ou are seto you,nt f often—how sit was sold, how. L used to and gwill wait for you—yes, till I am an ld walk the streets with a light heart, i old woman. Ihoped long since to have not with arrogance, but with just pride, gone to London on a visit, when I should thinking that I had painted the picture have seen your fathenbntpapa decided that of which some influentiala er spoke highly, and that a few of the persons ; we are living very quietly papa having be en you may think—I should have given you a commercial edneation, which would have masse you fitter for your present career. However, like you, I am not one to uselessly mourn over a 1,ast that cannot be recalled, p p I was not to leave the Manor Hall, where who passed me might possibly know that I was the artist. I never sold another picture abroad now for several months. I ought to ss off the Academy walls, but 1 am waiting, + tell yourself about it but for nothing can chaou must not nge my boy, I am waiting, anis you or 1 wi11; e. There is a gentleman who has been make a fortune yet. I wish I could paint here a great deal, and papa would be glad if Agnes' portrait I feel confident I could make a success of it ; with a face so sweet; I encouraged bis attentious. His name is Mr. Louis Redwood, and t do not like him, and pure before mel should be inspired, and you should see what you should see. Am I though papa wishes me to. It seems not writing to you.with an airy spirit? Ab to me that M r. Redwood understands this, for he has not been to Ch ad. but my dear lad, you little know how I miss you.—But there, I am not going to say a leigh since papa left, and has not troubled -word to sadden you; better burn the letter me iany way. I only tell you of him be - than send it to my wanderer across the seas cause me I think it right you should know all who is seeking the worldly charm which will that takes place. I have written to papa secure the happiness of himself and his father two or three times, asking hon to let nue go and the girl he loves. Until you went away to London fora few weeks, but his answer I used to grumble at time passing so quickly is always no. And now you must know bat new it cannot pass too quickly fox- me, something else. I am not very wise, but I for it will hasten the day of our reunion. have been consideringa certain thing lately, Everybody who knows you inquires after and when papa corns home I shall tell him all about you and me. I feel that I am acting you, and everybody sends you the kindest wrongly in keeping our secret from him ; it messages. God bless and speed you.—Your loving father." is my fault, I know, that this was not done "G. lawmen." at first, but I was a little afraid of the way "Fltobl Minimum PARTON, OTACO L11Ew papa would take it. • Seeing now what it is • right to do, I shall have the courage to do ZEALAND, TO MES Enema; UNDERCOVER it, and I am sure you will approve. Well, ro MIss RACHEL DIPROSE, MANOR HALL, now, this is all about myself, and nothing OPIUDLEIGH PARR. about you. What a wonderful life you are " My darling Agnes,—At last the first living, and how strange it must s.11 seem to six months are over, and I eau write to you. you. I get all the books I can about Aus• I wonder sometimes how it was that I gave tralia and New Zealand, and I know a great you the promise to write only onc?in every deal now abort those countries. Rachel six months, and then my wonder vanishes Diprose, my maid --such a good girl 1—has when I think it was because you asked me, an uncle there, and she says it is a fearing that if I wrote frequently it might splendid life, though she is all for set your father against me before the day .London, where she has never been but arrived when I shall feel myself warranted where her sweetheart lives. He is ready to ask his consent to our union. It is a hap- and anxious to marry her, but the good piness to Inc that the severe penance is light- foolish girl will not hear of it. She will not tened liy my father's letters, who gives me leave me, she says (unless I turn her away, as much news of you as it is in his power to and I shallnever.do that, I like her so much) communicate. My dear Agnes, I think of until I am married. It is not of the slight. you day and night, and it is your dear est use to argue with her; she has made up image that cheers my lonely hours and sus- her mind and has passed her word, and she tains my courage. You have heard from says she will die rather than break it. See my father of my unpromising start, which how firm women can be an if I needed a had something comical in it, and of my lesson in firmness, which I don't,. dear, she determination to. seek fortune on the gold- would teach me. This is a longerleeter.than fields. Here am I,,then, in my digger garb, I thought I could write, and I hardly know with heard well groan, and so unlike my 'whether it will satisfy you ; but perhapsyou London self, that wereyou to meet the in will be satisfied when I say that I am yours, the street you would hardlyrecognisemne. In and yours only, and that you may be sure I order that you may not make that mistake shall never love you less than now.. My in the event; of a gens taking it into his, mind is easier now that I have determined O. -. HAi.PA` E," To C. If er.Peee, Este., t1eN,ilt hair., Castro L.eteit 1'.\r,a, ritual ddu. U. Par.^sax, wrsT3w.c:TE8.1'.1t t' raw. "Sir,—•I ant in receipt of your letter. the contents of which I v,illcemmuncate to my son. From the relationship between its, and my stautling in society, though far frac a rich -Ila.:.?, I naigi,t: tx-otaably base egp:xt eti that you would hate expressed yourself in ditreient terms, v:ithoutany regard to the views yon hold of " Your daughter's wel- fare," and I shall certainly 1101 afford you the opportunity of addressiig myson to like manner. Therefore I refuse to give you his precise nddrees. lint as corny weeks must elapse before he eau hear what you baso written to me upon a matter as impor- tant and dear to him as It 14 to you, I lose no time in correcting your opinion of his character, an opinion which I trot yon have toe- hastily expre, acd. My sou is a Sentiesea1, upright, honorable. caul delicate -minded, and that you should prrnnttne. Ilii conduct 'sr'aadaioas' rc:leas noctc:lit upon you, Imord totaeertmpe9:cai to - Ay this, but you lease :ne no a!te. native, and I, and your dear dant liter, :re pasha g the 00 ' persona iu this part of the world who have the opportunity of telling yon tet JAMAICA, 1891 ' , e°' for , Canadian ted Shiites Exhibitors. LONDON, LABATT, The Most Fral?ii,•,o Fruit, This is without any doubt the banana, the produce of which is enormous. A thousand square feet planted, with thirty or forty . l,auanaa will yield, as many clusters with from 160 to PPO pioees on them. 1~ach cluster weighs from 417 to SO lbs., so that the thou - end square feet will produce 4.000 lbs. of nutritive substance; whilst the seine;pare in Europe would only grow 33 lbs. of wheat or 99 Iba. of potatoes. The produce, there- fore, of the bananas is to wheat as 133 to I, amid to the potato as 41 to 1. An eerie et bananas will. support twenty-five times as many people as au 7aere of wheat, 4 einem.' lar fact connected with the cultivation of 1 this frnit is that it sectla only in one small allot on the earth—the Andlana:an Isiattcwa, Everywhere else it must be raised front suckers. What the Freaobhig is For. There is a story; that some children had a ali_eusston concerning the services in one of our fashionable teanples, tine youngster, who had reached the mature age of seven Kidd: " I'd jut like to know what prevehiug is far," " Ole cdnti t you huow:"itiqutre l ilia five year-old sister. " Ws to give the a?neesa• e. rest, of eoatr::e." Savita; Ria Capit31 61You're a goose f"' angrily exclaimed a agar, to his wife who cssntinuelly chided him about his a xee'5ir a extrtiwaganee. " S, au do tis your Paye at the present moment. That ii ncatitia,:; taut tae;IDe, eaeele, caaDlle, all the he loves your dati titer as a gentleman, and " hopes to was icer, is true, and the only bar I can pe.-ueive to the happy result of an bouorable attachment is the diilereuee in aur circumstances. If, lavtwitliItending your letter, it should be hia happy fate to be united to your daughter, I. who know fey sett as no outer nen knows him. and who know something of the sweet and amiable qualities of y0111 cited, 111we no heaitatioti in declaring that their happiness wool 1 ba nasured. It is hest that I shall say no more, Time, which tries all, is a beneficent healer, and' place my hope in ft.—Faithfully yours, "t:, 1'aaTox," Yes, dear." she meetly replied; "but you salve not forget that time caekling geese nonce taxed the capital of Rome, and if cack- ling ern We your e;pttel, I'm going to keep it up," and she did. The Lag Resort, Mrs. De Fashion--" My dear, late home, late suppers and general seclal dissipation have ruined your constitution." Mite Ile 1'i idun (hello of six seasons)— "1 I know it, ma." "And your health is miserable." " Yes ma." "To Mn. f.. Pasrov. WINTAnNATEnl',,r.tett d Aur1 yon are losingyourbeanty." men, z'nnln Mit. Ii U.DANE, -ll l .oil ll.ir,i., :< It's all [tone, lite." Cairo neat Pane. " It really is. And so is year plumpness." 46 I'm nothing but skin and hones." Sir, --Your reply to my letter is imperti- .r There's no denying; it, my dear. You nently,• worded, and is intended as an intuit. aro a mere wreck of your former self." " Too true." " What etre you going to do about it t" "Get married. " It is not only an impertinence and an Insult, it is a presumption. I. -Shall know how to resent it, and in what matinee to guard my- self and daughter from ita implied defiance to my wishes. Yon refuse to grve the your son's address; I will obtain it front my daughter. You are a dealer in sentiment and cant, and your sou doubtless takes after yon—Your obedient servant, "O. HetateN1." 11 To C. IIALn tNn, Etq., MANOR, H.tr.r., Clzt'DLn,tOIIPAP,u, enee Mn. 0. Peueoo, WESTSIIN'TER PAL.V,'R, T.01D. "Sir,—Letters addressed to my son at the Post Office, Dunedin, Otago, New Zea- land, will rea^.h him in that colony,—Faith. fully yours, " . PARTON." (TO BE CONTINUED.) A Et ruts Etntirg-fico '.'cr 111« e, a its Dangers. From the northern part of Hudson Bay, already arctic in character-, stretches far to- ward the pole a, deep inlet, which some early navigator of those desolate polar shores has termed Roe's Welcome—as if anything with- in that icebound and lonely coast could be welcome to a person just from civilization ! The name no doubt was given in memory of some escape fronttlledrifting ice -packs, when the inlet furnished refuge front one of the fierce storms of that polar region. ltoe's Welcome is a famed huntiug•place for the great polar whale, or "bowhead" as the whalers call it. This huge whale, which is indeed immense in size often makes his home among the great ice -packs and ice - fields of the polar seas, and a goodly quan- tity of these it finds in Roe's Welcome. But these ice -packs, swing- ing to and fro with the tides, cur- relits, and winds in such a long narrow inlet as this, render navigation dangerous even for the stanch whaling -slops, and they generally make their fishing -grounds off the Lower mouth of the great unlet, whore the cruising is much safer if not always so profit- able. Occasionally, :when some exception- ally g god ice -master is in charge of ti whaler, he dashes into the better fishing -grounds for a short cruise; another less skilful, lured by the brighter prospects, or discouraged by a poor catch outside, enters the inlet, and either reaps a rioh harvest of oil and bone, or wrecks his vessel. Or he may even e- cope, after an imprisonment in the grip of the merciless ice -fetters for a year or two longer than he had intended to stay. Such was the fate of the good ship "Glad- iator," from a well-known whaling port in southeastern Massachusetts. She sailed to the northernmost end of the"Welcome,"as the whalers call it, and, after a most pro- fitable catch of "towheads," had the ill - fortune to remain firmly bound in the ice for two years. During this long time, much longer than that . for which the vessel had been provisioned, the crew were dependent on many Eskimos who clustered around the ship. The natives supplied. them with ample quantities of reindeer, musk-ox, seal, and walrus -meat in return for small quanti- ties of molasses and coffee. Their compan- ionship, too, rudeas it was, did much to while awathcheery, toady hours of the two years'"imprisonment.- Leteut,,Predei'ck. Scbwat-1•a, lir St. Nicholas. How to find a man out—sit on his door step until about 1 A. M, For Over Fifty Tears. .pins, Wever')w'i S•ior:riv; Svelte hiss been used by millions of mothers for their ehilttren while teething. If disturbed at night and broken of your rest by a sick child suffering and crying with pain of cutting teeth send at once and get a bottle of ••Jars. Winslow's Soothing Syrup" for children teething. it will relieve thepoor hole sufferer naine.liately. Depend upon it, motharne titers is no mistitko tomach and Bowel'. cures 11 ind Colic- softens the gums. reduces Infhunt tation, and gives tenoned energy to the whole system, • sirs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup' for children teeth- ing isp'easant to the taste and is the prescrip- tion at Ono of the oldest and best female physicians and nurses in the Iiuited States price, 25 cents a bottle. Sold by all druggists. throughout the world Ile sure and ask for Slug- l riseLOv.. 'iOlrrut3O thitur." CO 1JM1'TIO\ CURED. An old physician retired from practice. hav- ing had placed in his bands by an Bast India 10 ssteners the formula of a simple vegetable remedy for the speedy and permanent cure for Consumption, Bronchitis, Catarrh„Asthma and alt throat and lung atrections, also a positive and radical euro for nervous debility and all nervous complaints, after having tested its wonderful curative powers in thousands of cases. has felt it his duty to make it known to his suffering fellows. Actuated by this motive. and a desire to relieve human suffering, I will send free of charge. to all who desire it, the recipe in German, French or English with full directions for preparing and using. Sent by mallby addressing with stamp, naming this Paper. Wter. N. X O YES, 33O Power's $lock, Roche I have a positive remedy for the above disease; by its nae tttonsande of eases of the worst kind and of long standing have boon cored. Indeed so strong is my faith is its efficacy, that I will send TWO BOTTLES FREE, with a VALUABLE TREATISE on . this disease to any sufferer who will send too their EXPRESS and P.O. address ' T. A. Stoounn, M. C., 186 AoelauoF ST., WEST, TORONTO, ONT. EXETER LUMBERYARD The undersigned wishes to lnfvrra tae Public at generaleral that he keeps constantly iia Stack ail Linde of BUILDING MATERIAL DxosaQct or 17214res „ed, P1 N E AND HE .TLOCK LUMBER. SHTNGL t'S► A SPECIALTY 00,000 X X and X X X Pae and Cedar S11i11Ales now in - stoop, A call Nlloited and MR satssfaeion guarauted. AXES WyJiLI1R M DOLL BROS. ec COMPANY, TQr ,QNTO. Manufacturers s tui l Wholesale Dealers iia the folloviiu specialties ZiarlItue Cy a,clox Zted. Enc4132.ED 0I Wool Molt Cutting uxe3ta, TRY OUR L.&RDI TE MACHINE OIL AND YOU WILL USE n O1URR, For Sale By B1SSET'1' BROS. Exeter, Ont. Xs caod both internally and esternally. It acts quickly, nL:ordinc almost instant relief from the severest pain. DIRECTLY TO Tel SPOT. IfISTRATIVEOUS Iii ITS RCTIOrL For CRAMPp, CHILLS, COLIC, DIARRIIA, DYSENTERY, CHOLERA MORBUS, sett all ROWEL, COMPLA!NT7; No REMEDY EQUALS T H E PAIN -KILLER. In Canadian Cholera and Zowel Complaints Its effect Is magical. It cures in every short time. THE BEST FAMILY REMEDY Fon, BURNS, BRUISES, SPRAT' RHEUMATISM. iEURALGIA and TOOTHACH Soto evanrwscRrr Ar 24o. A Dome CrBorate of Counterfeits and Imitations. 4 .5%. • \A 0Q�,�QAO� S. e og-�'�~ Purchasers sllonld look to the Label on the Boxes and Pots. If the address isnot 633, OXFORD ET., LONDON, they are spnk,vuu. ot'� • •�b�.S.s p b tt` DO YOU KEEP IT IN THE HOUSE? ALLEN'S LUNG BALSANI 110 BETTER REMEDY FOR COUGHS, COLDS, CROUP, CONSUMPTION, &C. ee pe. -- ,ice-„..«. PUREST, STRONGEST, REST. Contains no Alum, Ammonia, Lime, Phesphates, or any Injuriaut. -„::t:•'1:,:a {A. rai:,tW l'o 'w `_`-°- '+",• Ft s,a.1 .4,,,,,,,,,,'a�p.,o.. �gIS°6lSisaleti nsguuarantteed SWary and ExpeneeeaPalslePreot- liar sdvantagee to beginners. Stock Complete, with last -selling specialties. OItITFET I'E tE. We Guarantee what we cduerU,e Write BROWN metomESR, Nareerynten, Toronto, Ont. (Thle hoose le ratable.) The man who attacked the Czarewitch rel Otsu, Japan, and who was sen tenced to ij'e mprisonment, died last week of pneum emit An engiue-driver of a steam -tram on th. Marly line lost his life on Sunday in a heroic attempt to save a woman who was walking on the rails. The cars were descending a rather steep incline at the time, and the driver blew his horn several time, but the female did not seem to hear The man ac- cordingly went to the head of the engine, and, . while hanging on it with one hand, tried to lift up the woman - with the other and to throw her on the roadside. In en- deavouring to carry out his perilous plan, the man's foot slipped, and both heandthe. person whom he tried to rescue fell under the cars and were crushed to death. It was found that the driver's legs and ribs had been broken, and there was a large ugly. gash in his head. The woman was less bruised and cut about, but nevertheless had received in- ternal and external injuries whinli caused her almost instantaneous death. The acci- dent happened midway between Marly-le Roi, near Versailles, and fort 1Vlarly. .$0' cn THE BEST COUGH MEDICINE. 6DLD B3 DItt/C IIBT„'ETEBYWBEBE READ -MAKER'S -sr 411,41.616 IL? NEVER Res TO OWE SATISFAOTI01I F�1 SALE BY ALL VEAL1R81 Snug IRO(' fortunes Lave heen mndoaa, work for u., by Agra, Pogo , Austin,,, •coxa., awl J. V43 Toledo, Ohior. Soo eat. Others aro ito/agas wen, Why not•you1 Setae earn 'ever 0000:00 a 1110113h. 1.011 can do Mews'* end1I,0 - ethome, wherever yes era rale&'” ginnei0 00 enatty earning ,{lief• St10 a.ln y: all to agog:.WO, w• owl stmay a Con wtuIf f' or nil the area. ,lig OAP` ars. l'nilnre anl=c+` r 1 t' mtdwen pat^ i1.11[alte4t -te 00..7:00 <stpa0•0ta' I