HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1893-10-26, Page 6OURMOTHERS kaowled,ge went Out when Cerlywig came
9,j Ej . to leer prenurtnre mejorltyt t ometimaett ib
is all bhe. other way, when the still pretty,
.ball fitrOdligts reobhere of great
Their Positions is Nessa Gilt; Afro
O netini 4E ev .Sed,
GIRLS OFTEN TOO FAST.
The Bare Exception. Should ,ate the Rule—
/Mike Girls Willed Mothers
-'lite OM Religion of tote gamily.
ERT.IN among as
look forward with
eatief,rotie n to oho time
when the " relig-
ion of the family "
8.10.11 he extlnao
when all the tender
poetry of bite home
"hail be of no mere
vutoe than a Grub
,tree:, • ballad, says
M:s. Lynn Linton in
the Queen. Like pee
tri eine co, Like the sano-
tiby of marriage, like
obedf,: ,:e to the; taw as law, like reveal fer
superior ..t:elainmen+s, like respect for one-
self ani ,.se's own rignity, like many other
time., to (Ted and, venerable faiths, the "re-
ligiea of the family " ie mid te be doomed,
and am more unfettered individuality its be
take its plaoe. Henceferwarr9, mothers will
gradually become more wed mare
LIKE =SECTS, BIRDS AND ANIMALS.
They wLll bring their young into the world,
protect them in their ear1ieas days of weak-
ness and iacapaolby, feed thea fer so long se
they need to be fed, and see that they do
not commit untimely suicide by falling into
the fire or straying fate the weber. And
then, by the tune they can take care of
themselves, the tie is to be dissolved, and
the child is to be freed from all obligation
to the mother—the mother fe te be freed
from all duby to her child.
.Already we see foreshadowed the feabnree
of that future dameattc disruption ; and,
!rye in. a few honerable exceptions—and
how beautiful they are !—tae once close tie
between parents and children, eepecially be-
ltweenmothera and daughters, is undeniably
Ieosened. And even where an undoubted
friendship stilt exiatp, hew often we find bhe
tables turned, and those tbinge which used
to be extensively the fnncbtonsof the mother
now taken up by the daughter. Time was
when the mother was cenridered the best
guido and
SAFEST COMPANION FOR HER DAUGHTER
—the ene who, by age, experience, relative
position, had the power to advise and the
right to be obeyed. Time ie when bhe girl
holds he self ae the mere experienced of the
two, the one whe is np to date, while the
ether is arrested, old-tashiened, behind the
times. With the sentiment of bhe religion
of the family has gene bhab ether, which
was its logical oubaeme—the honor of the
family. If bhe home-absying girls whe still
oling to bhe old way are held saored by their
own, to be defended against insult or im-
pertinence, the globe•brobtere and the col-
legiate, the professional aerie living alone in
Leaden lodgings, and the outside workers
of any profession, are aaturaltybeyend the
pale ef family protection. They no longer
belong to their father or brothers, an crea-
turea to be sheltered and fenghb for if need
be. They have preferred the independence
of the streets to the aafeby of the home; and
they themselves most be
THEIR OWN PROTECTORS,
and their own chaperone and guides. When
they come to grief ae so many of them do,
whe can right the wrong ? Surely nob the
mother, whose advice they do not ask and,
would not take should it be given. Surety
net the er fatb hoseauthority
w they have
discarded, nor bhe brothers whose lives
they have copied, thus making themselves
in a mauaer equal, andcertainly outside
the area of protection. When they find
themeelvea foe to face and hand to hand
with the rapacity, the diehoner, the
treachery, the tyranny, the immorality of
the world—while all their own armor le
simply the old lessens ef unworldly high -
mien' daces taughb in their younger daye—
they As ave to learn by cruel experience bow
to become as adobe, perhaps as base as
their opponent's. They have first to suffer,
and then—either to " go Hader," retatoing
their high-mindedneae—or to defend them -
elves and oome out triumphant by meeting
heir aesailanba with their own weapons.
The
MOTHER MIGHT HAVE SAVED THEM
from much, if not all, of this, had they in-
quired of her. But they did nob; and on
themselves alone hangs the blame.
The complaint made by the modern
daughter against her 'motheris, " She
doea not know.1' All youth is heady, and
apt to flout the wiser counsels of age ae
effete and beside the mark. But never has
the world seen a time eo contemptuous ef
the pact as this—so satisfied with the
presenb, eo sure of the future. We are apt
to have a brand new human nature, and the
daughters of the day are its heralding
angels. Mothers know nothing. The ele.
mental principles ofmodesty and propriety
are ae dead and done with as the dodo and
the mammoth. A young man thinks ib is
no breach of manners to ask a young girl to
tea in his roema-at hie club ; and
a young gtrl thinks it no
infraction of the time-honored prinoiploe of
modeaby and propriety to accept the invita-
tion and profit by it. The mother is nob
asked. She would be in the way and a
nuisance; and when she remenetratee-
that is, if she knows what ie'' being done,
which, nine times out of ten, ebe doer pot—
her daughter snubs her With a lofty,
" YOU ARE OUT Or IT, MOTHER.
Yen do not knew things. Every ane dons
ib, and why should nob T ? What harm is
there in it ?" Nob harm exactly. One
does nob say that ; bub orooked appearances
are in themaclves-harmfal, and far the
moot innocenb girl in the world to , be
aeon too much about with young mon,
or to go to their rooms. etc., unchaperoned,
is by the very force of appearanoeo an evil
thing, and the world le petrified in oondemn-
ing
Sometimes the mother, weak in will and
indolent in mind, given in to her daughter
Without a struggle. She gives her young
Ourylwig hoe head, and iota her go at her
own pane where end how the will. No
maternal remo>rabrauoe rouaoa the; girl'e
temper, er cheeks the undesirable
IAtIBTtrS To 1IB18 hASa =SOLVES.
No enrolee of natural authority puto an
end to things which ought never to have
been begun, or brings bo the mind of that
wilful Maid the hitter truth of how the
world jut ea, and, judging, how lb pro.
nounoen upfuo and Indolent, perhaps too
cowardly to brave ibis pain, the rttiebbergivea
tip both her dubbin and reeponsfbillbfos, and
the daughter ate' tight and rides over hes.
It fa net always that the daughter aebe
aside the mother as an effete old petty, for
"hon tihe light of life' and the Jima of
L� «tperEd. l+1p]iix ._
Oneinne GI141.5 OB EIGHTEEN
affeob to consider them toe young to be
introduced, and eo keep them in the ei hool-
room with brief ekirt9 and Sowing manes,
and passionate deetree bo participate in the
pleaaurea evidently so dear to mother.
There are snob, and we all know them.
And where the mothers erre fealty it le
too much to expoot the danghbers to be
perfeot. If "evil oemmunicattona corrupt.
good manners" ss bebaeea mere aoquainb-
ancee, whwta may nob bedone for harm
when bhe question is between two people
joined together by one of the closest ties
keewn to man
Turn from these miebakelt mothers-
these recalcitrant or subdued or haply no-
glechid daughters—to these homes where
"the religion of the family" ebiil;exists,
these homes wh'oh the world's roue make
fragrant and aril pante lilies of life adorn.
Such deugnbrrre pt . we are thinking of now
are the
TRUE FRIENDS new COMPANIONS
of their- rnothere•, ob. dient while perhaps
probaontng them, re'p. o.ful while perhaps
managing then Wane weak bealtir tnoa-
paotbatet dared ed. , other from performing
the robuseer tattoo of seoiety and the hetne,
the daughter cakes the place ef praobioal
headship, leaving the mother alwaye that of
titular o"mreander. She makes no parade
of authority, _tike those other "fin-de-
sieole," "up-to-date "Biala B azogke in um-
brella akirte' and empire sleeve!, who main•
tain that mother knows nothing, le oat of
fashion alt ebh oannat a er and cane t even tie her
own bonnet stringer. She does her work
with genblenesa' and energy combined,
and with. diligence and agent tem-
per, devotion and benderneas. To her
the mother is always a dear one of bhe
earbh, and nob the finest merrt ge teat oan
be offered oeuld tempt ber away from this
her primal and her holiest ditty. Mother
wants her, and no one else shall take her.
More than one ebreng heart fails because
of her deoiston ; perhaps, too, her own may
ache in aeoreb : but she has traded out bhe
path of her duty as she conceives it ought
to be, and she adhere, to it wibhoub
faltering. When people wonder how
she can, and 'peak of her life as lone-
some and without color, perhaps without
beanby, she whispers softly that heartening
stave :
Straight is the line of Duty, curved is the line
of Beauty;
Follow the first and thou shalt see the latter
ever following thee.
With this she is oontonb. Who would nob
be who had a soul washed clean of self, and
a consoience unstained by worldly sine ?
StTISPACTIoN ASKED.
An Editor Demands a Elliot Particulars In
the Charge of Kneeling,
The scribbler who delis tt a dirty work in
Paris for the B•antlerd Courier, being
anxious to let the peep'e know that he was
able te borrow mane r envogh to bake him
to the World's Fair, and elm to get saffi-
client geed olothes ea o-edtt to wear while
there, speak! of a painting thab he beheld
while gaziog idly around the art gallery at
the White City. He further atates that it
was a picture of a man ; then ib did
nob resemble that Indio dual. He
also states that the man watt rep-
resented as being en his bended
knees. Many a good man' has been seen in
bhab position, but when he frays that it re-
sembles ye editor as kneeling before a soli-
tary policeman, then he simply lien for we
never were known be kneel before any man,
mach less a poltcemao, er any person who
may think that ail should bow to them even
in their mean actiene. That lying thing does
nob nay where or when the kneeling was
done. Therefore we are unable to deal wibh
that part of the question at present. There
being only a night constable in Paris, it
could nob have ocourred here. We would
ask that scribbler to name his policemen,
and where he resides and also give his own
autograph and we will thew him that we
Den handle him without gloves. He is only
a mean, dirty sneak, in trying to get a slap
at as ever the bank of another, and one
whose action!, if known, may nob be of a
very savory kind either. Just give us the
names, please, ofyour policeman and your-
self, and we will make you acquainted wibh
the kind of food we recommend for your
digestion, in order to keep your mental
organa rights, andalso the kind of pie
eaitable for your policeman, whoever or
whatever be may be. We are jest cut and
dried for eibher,ef you. Come on, Macduff,
and we may see who will de the kneeling
and the humble -pie eating.—Paris Review.
Obituary Elegance.
Ib is our sad duty -to reoerd that once
more has bhe grim reaper with kis sickle
keen invaded our midst.. On Wednesday
lash, jest after : the ens had kissed the
world a hailing good -night and sunk to
rest in its bedof crimson end gold, the
spirit of our esteemed fellow -townsman,
Henry, the beloved hnobend of Sarah
Ellen Prog and the late Caroline Prog,
vacated its habitation of play, and
wended Its way' to the land of',Iighb,
te walk forevermore on the glory -
lit hill! of immortality. Mr. Prog was
t} shining example of how an enter-
prising and ambib!oua man may rise
to eminence in free America. - He had been
ab different times' shot, stabbed, clubbed,
chopped with axes, kicked by males, blown
up in explosions, barred and feathered
twice by mistake, scalded by an indigeanb
grate widow; and passed through the
divorce court ; and yob he lived to occupy
.bhe -responsible positions of yeetryman in
the Mebhodieb Church and oiby dog -killer.,•
=We miaa him asdly, bub have bhe consola-
tion that wha"b is our loosis heaven's gain.
In this connection we take ooaasion to re.
mark that in the Eaab it is not considered
exactly the proper thing to parbiolpate in a
funeral prooeesion mounted on a bicycle,
as was done by two or three of the mourners
on lasb,Wednesday. We trust that our
friends will snake a note ofthie bit of
ebignebbe.—Pilceville Clarion.
A ]Live Toad In a hailstone.
A hailstorm vented Pawbuoket about
10 o'clock Saturday evening such as has
not visited this vicinity for years, if
in the memory of man. One woman pinked
np a large hailstone and allowed ib to melt
in her hand. Elbe thought something was
inside bhe little piece of fr<zen rain,' bub
wen Murprieed to find, when all had melted,
a little live toad or frog in her hand. There
is a quite general belief thab a great manor
pebbles came ,down wibh the hail—Prov►-
denee Journal.
R. HOWARD'S
ELECTRIC
Tho latest and groan
est diecovory by the
inventor of Pink Pills
for Pale People.
'OE, i121i11t WOMBilr AND 011ILDiIElf,
(Jure all Wetknose of train, Body, Norvee
and ,System Anairhfa, St.'Crittss' Dano°,Paraly
SIS, Ataxy, j'th umo,bisni, Sciatica., Neuralgia
Early Decay, Fabians Irregularity and Weak
noes, Large betel, ton. ; six for $2.60: DinIi0Weetni ninettend CO., Sro0kv1110,Ont..
VCIE ;aio�� nrweroLEARN.
q
" You rhyme in patina of my golden lair,
Ah, but the gold may turn to gray,
You vow that no maiden with me may, come
pare
Yes, but the Springtime villi pass away.
"Though my eyea are blue as the deep blue
sea,
Blue eyes can facie through, theorist of years
What if the end of your rhyme should be
Blistered and spoiled with salt, sad tears it bei
Then 1 must find rhymes for snow-white
hair.
Dear, if the gold should turn to gray,
For never anotherwitli you may compare,
E'eu though the Springtime has passed away.
7f your eyes, now blue as the deep bine sea,
Should fade, beloved, through the mist of
years.
What care I, sotogether we be ?
Only, sweetheart, let me dry those tears."
In India lash year 274 bigots were killed
Heaven never helps the man who will not
sob.—Sophocles.
The slump in the planks season hat flooded
the basket market.
A. dish of eweitzer cheese makes a good
mantra piece for a dining -room table.
In the reign of Louie XVL. the hate of
the ladies were two feet high and four
wide.
A floor -washing nabob would nob attract
much attention. Ib would be classed as a
scrub -rase.
The soul without imagination is what an
observatory would be wibhonb ateleecope.—
S. W. Beecher.
The time spent in brooding over troubles,
if properly employed, would enable you te
surmounb them..
ALIT03LNAL DREAMS.
When the maple turns to crimson
And the sassafras to gold ;
When the gentian's in the meadow
And the aster's on the wold
When the moonis lapped in vapor
And the night is frosty cold;
When the chestnut burrs are opened
And the acorns drop like hail,
And the drowsy air in startled
With the thumping of the flail—
With the drumming of the partridge
And the whistle of the quail,
Through the rustling woods I wander,
Through :he jewels of the year,
From the yellow uplands calling,
Seeking her that still is dear ;
She is near me in the Autumn,
She, the beautiful, is near.
—I3AYARD .TAYLOR.
Mrs. E. M. Denney, of Aehlsnd, Ore.,
has received by mail a living rose tree from
the Garden of Gethsemane.
Marriage in Abysainia is . a mere tem-
porary arrangement, and it appears that a
prteat's aid is raraty nailed in.
Dooter—Are you ever troubled with in-
somnia ? Patient—Oh, dear, no. I can
sleep all night. Im a policeman.
The man who stayed from church all sum•
mer bemuses bhe weather was too warm will
now remain at Name because it is too °eel.
In China a boy begins his schooling ab g
years of age, and is at hie study nesrtp
twelve houra a day, seven days to bhe week.
Jayemith—I ought not to have bet that
$13. I might have known l would lose it.
It's an unlucky number. Cnmse—Non-
eenee The mea who wen it bat $13, too,
didn't he ? Jaycmibh-No ; he gave odde.
He bet $26.
CIfANGED HER NA1VSE-
Her mother named her " Mary," that good,old
fashioned name,
And all through school she wore it, contented
with the same.
But when she graduated and Ieft the school
behind
She dropped the "r" and " May" became—
'twee eo much more refined.
She's married now and off the hands of her
enduring pa.
Still more her name has been reduced—her
youngest calls her "iiia-"
The Fools Not all Dead Yet.
Even a blind man can see that more
clearly than daylight, or else why should eo
many continue bo use ill smelling, oily and
often useless preparations for the relief of
paln, when a preparation just as cheap,
elegant, more powerful, and penetrating as
Nerviline is canbe purchased from any
dealer in mediolne? Nerviline curets
instantly stokes and pains. Nerviline is the
moat efficacious remedy for internal pain.
Nerviline applied externally aubdues the
moab intense pain almost ab once.
Medicine in Washington.
A physician in Bawds (Washington) ap-
pears to have been serionaly e.ffscbad by the
recent finanolal money atringeney. In the
lest number of the Bucada Enterprise he
relieves his melancholy by this touching
utterance : "Three or four .years is net a
lifetime, bub it ie a long time for a doobor
bo wait for his fee when his wife and babies
are crying for bread and eorgbum. I will
bake anybhing on accent 'from a spring
chicken to a hillside farm, bat a cebblement
of some kind -I must have. In future, a die -
count of 10 per cent. will be given on all
bilis paid monthly. If you pay year physi-
cian promptly he will attend you promptly,
night or day, rain or shine, while your
slow neighbor suffers and waits as he made
the dowser wait; and while he hi waiting
the angels gather him in."
Lacking in the Flrsb Principles -Percival
—Father, I den'b .want bo go to that college.
It's a poor concern. His Father --Peer, my,
eon ? Ib is an old, wealthy and famous in-
stitution that numbers among its graduates
some of the moat noted mon in the land
What possible objection clan you have
ageinab it? Percival -1 don't like ibs yell,
When a public man has Iosb his grip he
will nob "„de much hand -shaking with oon-
atituents.
Ad $ZT$4O$D11AEY ,11011AR.
1,a.teescribed I>z a Cartons AdverUcen est
of the OIdea Times.
Tho following hi a. copy of an advertise-
ment which appeared in a ,parting maga-
zine eighty years ago:
” On Saturday, the 16th of September
next, will be sold ab.Skibberton, the strong,
staunob, steady, about, sound, safe, elnewy
t{ervicable, strapping, supple, swift, smart,
sightly, sprightly, spirited, sturdy, shining,
eurefooted, sleek, well -sized, well -shaped,
Sorrel steed, of superlative symmetry,
styled Spanker, wibh small star
and snip, square -sided, slender -
shouldered, sharp -sighted, and .singu-
larly stately, free from strain,
spavin; apaem, ebringhalb, abanguary,
acistioa, staggers, scouring, abranglee,
saliendere, soerfoot, eurefelte, seams,
strt mens swellings, soratohes, splint,
squint, equirbe, scrubs, Raabe, scare, :eoree,
acaobering, shuffling, shambling-gaib, or
symptoms of dolmen ef any sorb.. He
is neither stiff rnoubhed, shabbyrooated,
siaew-ehrank, 'spur -galled, eaddle•galled,
sheirtsobhed, sung -gutted, surbated,
skin -nabbed, short-winded, splay -footled,
or shoulder -slipped ; and is eoand in
sword-poinb and stifie•joint, has neither
sick, agleam, aitfasb, snaggle-teeth, sand
oraok, starring-ooab, swelled ° sheath, ner
shattered hoof, nor is he sour, sulky,
surly, atabborn, or sullen in temper; neither
shy nor skitbieb, slew, aluggieh, or stupid ;
he never slips, strips, strays, stake, aborts,
stops, shakes, snarls, snuffles, stumbles, nor
stalks' in the stable, and soaroaly or seldom
sweat's: has a showy, stylish swltoh'tall,
and a safe, strong set of shoes en; can feed
on soil, ;bubble, sanfoin, sheaf oats, stray
sedge, or scotch grass ; oarriea sixteen stone
with surprising speed in his stroke over a
six-foob sod or sten wall. His sire was sly
Seborcides, a sporting sen of Sparkler, who
won the sweepebekea and subscription plate
lest season at Sligo."—London Million.
No Disapolntment
Can arise from the use of the great sure -pep
cora cure —Pitman's Palnleaa Corn Ex-
tractor. Putnam's Estraater removes
corns painleaely in a few daye. Take no
substitute Ab druggists.
NA.SSIONS IN FMB.
Canadian Marten and Seal to be the Mode
This Winter.
According to La Mode, with thoae who
can afford ib, Russian sable is bo be prime
faveribe. For those who cannot, Canadian
Marten is a capital substitute, and, if nee
quite so fine as the Russian fur, it comes
mere within bhe range ef the everyday
buyer. Other good substitutes are Vision
er mink, which look remarkably Iike the
genuine article. A ooneiderable amount of
is will be employed this esaeon on gewne,
coats, capes, opera and theatre wraps, etc.,
etc. Seal and astraban will still be used,
but bhe most fashionable kind of the last
named fur will be the soft, finely -waved
skins, which look more like jet•blaok
moire plush than for, and is used no make
abylish closely -fibbing create, or Eton vests
turned bask with velvet or fur lapels. An-
other advantage of this far ie that of being
exeeetlingly supple and thio -skinned, and.
will nob impart an awkward appearance to
the figure.
Every shade of fox fur, from black,
which is prieeiens, to silver, is to be seen in
hoes and miffs, while skunks and Labrador
of mediate and attainable prices are used
for skirt trimming, lapels, collate, cuffs, etc.
Canadian seal, a species of Hofs, black far,
very pleasant and velvet-like bo the tench,
and sprinkled with silver hairs, and jasb
half the price of bhe ether species, le much
patronized for Xining opera cloaks, and is
often seen in the broad turnover collars of
ont-ef-door garments.
Some of the most fashionable seal coats
are trimmed with sable. Persian Iamb is
a' ill worn.
Fur Is especially effective in combination
with cloth and velvet. The latter it the
fabric, par excellence, for royal ermine,
which is to the fore this season.
Deaths From Anaesthetic8.ilwl
Garit reported to the lash Surgical Con•
green ab Berlin the fallowing statistics of
deabhe Hader anmsthebioa. They are made
up from the observations of 62 operators,
who anaesthetized 109,196 persons, wibh 39
fatal remits, showing one death to 2.800
narooses. The following were the anresbhe
ties need :
Narcoses. Deaths
Chloroform 94,123 36
EEther and Chloroforn 2,889911 11
Ether and Alcohol..... 1,381 0
Bromoform with ethyl bromide 2,131 1
Penthal 210 1
In 2,913 cases the narcosis lasted ever an
hour; in an eperabion for uterovaginal
fietule, four and ene-half hours ; in a case
of tetanus, nine henry. In 25 cases, of
which pest mortem examinations were
made, cardiac disunite were found. The
author urges careful examination of the
heart before administering chloroform.—
Gond. Extracts.
It rays
Boys and girls who wish to make a mous
of life to take a course of abudy at bhe Galt
Badness College and Shorthand Insbitute,
Galt, Ont. Ne °lasses formed. Each
student taught separately. Write for clr-
,eulars. Lewesb rata:.
In some of the cyclone -blowing States of
the West the people are afraid to have a
High School.
Base Deceiver—How could you conscien-
tiously bell Mise Eder that the is the only
waman yen ever laved? Pillingbaab—Ib is
a fact. The otheriewere all young girls.
.Manufactured bury by _
VJD NionToN g; SONS
HAMILL TONO .NT: currnise
TERNI�s[itl�rrxl8.
Which Are the Envy of AU disters and
Cousin* and Aosta.
Ib's 'deiced bo envy other people, bat
What gtri dowsn'b look with envious eyes ab
that other gftl—
Who has a faaoinating dimple in either
cheek
Who has manning little feeb that she
doeea'b have to keep oonabently covered
with the hem of her Blurts 1
Who can hay` childish things and not
appear Mkt tie '
Who te always well informed on enrreab
events t
Who knows how bo receive a compliment
without an embarraeeing blush and painful
smile?
Whose .hands are plump and white, and
whose nails are always pink and even ?
Who hse the knack of saying the right
thing ab the right time?
Who deeen'b oars a cent how the looks
or how old her gown ie?
Whose nose doesn'b get all shiny -and
need powdering every half hear
Who has enough willpower to paw a
soda water fountain or a bargain counter
without making a wry face ever the netnews
of her pocketbook?
Rubber Bibbed Cloth for Bars.
Oa Chambers street rubber ribbed cloth
is being geed on the paying counters of
ltgaer sborea, The jingling of the guinea is
becoming annoying bo the ears of civilize -
Men, arse this means of silences is adopted,
and it also prevents the coin from rolling.
A restaurant keeper in Providence experi-
mented with a cloth made like the eoinmat,
that ie, with the little pegs inserted as seen
in the Diger and ether stores, but every
boy that came in end arms men began
to ptok and tear them out, and he sub-
stituted the plain corrugated oleth with
economy.—Philadelphia Record.
Those Wide Brims..
Wiliie—Say, can I have that straw hat ef
yours when• you net through with it?
Featherstone—Yee, Willie. What do you
want it for?
Willie—Pm going to cut off the Crevea and
nae the brim for a circus ring.
Ninety-two cerdlnale have been created
since the advent of Leo XIII. to the p iniiS-
oat throne, that number having died during
the BEMIS time. The College of Cfr 1tnale
number's aixtythree—of whem twebby
nine are fereignere and thirty-four are
Italians.
So vast are the ruins of Pompeii that they
cannot all be exoevated, ab the ordinary rate
of progress, before the middle of the next
century.
The politician spends a lot of money for
lfgnide ill order to make himself "eolid."
CHAMPION STUMP AND STONE EXTRACTOR.
Over 4,000 in use in the
Dominion. Will do the
work of 8 men and 4
horses. If you have
stumps or stones to get
out you cannot afford to
do it in the old way. Cir-
cular giving testimon-
ials, price etc.
S. S. KIMBALL
Craig street P. VP..
Box 943
Montreal, P. Q.
-L OR SALE FLORIDA LAND, 1520 ACRES;
strictly first-class for farming and garden-
ing. SLOAN BROS.
Greenville, S. C., U. S. A.
WANTED.
A good, live, active agent in every town in
Canada to handle a household article used in
every home. 50% profit. Good moneycan be
made easily. Write for full particulars to
DOMINION SPECIALTY 00.,
310 Kine; Street East.
Hamiigon Ont.
E
Boot inti 1: offidi
Got tis® Genuine!
kid Doev hem
Wo send the mamolone French
Remedy CALTHOS free, and e
legal guarantee that CArrnos Hill
ATOP Dt, ehargea dt Emiss$oae,
OQBE Spermatorrh Carteocale
And RESTORE Lost icor.
Use ft and ay iftis�ied
sa.
stares,, VON MOHL Cs1t
5,1e Amert<ae Agent., Clnciwaai!, hills:. s
issue NO 43 189
NOTE
Est realty g to say of Moan adventa„ r
moats asete lace MO owner.
Connt
is
is oftentimes absolutely
cured in its earliest stages
by the use of that won-
derful
Food Medicinal
Scott's
Emulsion
which is now in high
repute the' world over.
i' C3UTIOR."—Bessre of substituted
Genuine prepared by Scott a Downs,
Belleville. Sold by all druggists.
60c.and SI.00.
°° SUVE
If
STOVES AND FANS
Made from ORIGINAL DESIGNS
and PATTERNS.
They are Superb in Finish,
and Superior in Quality of
Material and Workmanship:
They Excel in Baking Quali-
ties and in Economy of *'C
Fuel, and Convenience;
They are made to barn wood exelusivebes
or coal and wood, and in a great variety oT
sizes, and are therefore adapted to the require-
ments of large or small families, in any part tie
the Dominion.
Every stove warranted.
If you are in want of a cook stove or base
burner, don't buy until you have seen thisr
elegant line. Sold by leading stove dealer%
everywhere.
alannfactured by
The GURNY-TILDN CO.
(l:Yai ITEC 1,
HAMILTON, CNT.
OHS IVVT's
Valuable treatise and two bottles oftnediciaescat rreetot
anySufferer.
• 0...1e 81 West Ad,elaid SttrOeet.T Oo address. nb.�'
MOS. WINSLOW'S s s,rgO
FOR CHILDREN TEETHING
For talo by. all Druggists. 85 Cents a bottle.
AGENTS!
HERE
YOR ARE.
"Samantha at the World's
Fair,” by Josiah Allen's
Wife, Overl'leillustrations
nearly 60) pages. ' No terri
tory assigned. Send $1 for
prospectus, and push the
canes if you want to make
money.
WILLIAM BRIGGS,
Temperance street
Toronto
von.SAf-g,-.al Ll.
8000 Sores of li Armin g Lanae, w tin 20 rails
of Saginaw (pop, 00.000), and within 2 to 5 urtica
of raUread, Terms 1 $5 to $15 per acre 01 5 dove„
VS r hes near per Well int imbe go Soon 1 aE s
maps and ciroulars.
WM. M. T..16ENANT
Heavenrioh Bloc.
Saginaw. IQ. S., Mein
rOCIIET torn remelt ST.tnr, WITH neer,
ClubpHdr-Br-Stnmpry
Self -Taker 20e,a�T' al PontDald ror tl.00 IUIL Uv
Dfarkellnon,anrde,ke 5 Newaste.blgnleney.Terme rec.
Thalman Manufacturing Company
350 Balt Street
Ballo.; Md. U. S. A
SAUSAGE CASINGS.
Best Imported English Sheep's Casings, also
Prime American Hoge' Casings. Full lines
Hams, Bacon, Lard, eto. Lowest prices to the
trade.
Park, Blackwell ee Co. (Ltd.), Toronto,
On
l je �3 C ie DR. SLOCUM'S COMPOUND PENNS,
d. 9 V ROYAL TEA novor Pods, rrtae Dc, by mot:
StSIPL°I FREE. lady lgontawontedr
T. A. S!.00UNI 8c' 00., Toronto, /Brt&�erlo,
cogs kat% cal
wPeTari�'1aA: pigg0��6���91..
ms
150
Valuable treatise and bottle of medicine sent Free to any
Sufferer. Give Ex rtes and Post Onion address. H. G
ROOT. M. C., 116 West Adelaide Street. Toronto, Ont
1, l iflabfeby l AND
for sale by the
SAINT PAnL
.t: nuetalr Itaxanoae
COMPANY In MYlinnesota. Send for itfaps and Circa.
tars. "They will be sent to you
Adeesil HOPEWELL CLARKE,
Land Commfaefoner, St. Pahl, Mill.
AGENTS WANT EDmale and female;.
It To nen our Flew Wear
Clekuer. Eulimlr cell, U err kauetzep,r. Alfa cum'.
menu, Cat nue Owing'gnivec, Carver- and Knife and srisc aC
aharpemr. Ne capital revered. Emredl-rs, 8 a.
CLAUSS E11t:AR CO.. Lock .:54. t Burt'To:m,M-°aE.
Ya..,'..••hl,r,r ucn.:r„Y.rrwM1SM' , P114 e. In;.N],NY4. I.
COUGH : EA8Y
SY TAILING
' Eby's German Breast Balsam ,•
Toa cough easy and soon are eared of ;r
cough. a,
WIIAT PEOPLE SAH OR IT.
Mr. 3 Rowe, Pori, 'Elgin, says Eby'e
German Breast Balsam is the hest
cough mediolne he has ever used.
A4r. D. F. Smith, Organizer Patrons of
Industry, has no, hesitation in recommend-
ing Eby's German Breast Balsam, the
best medicine In existenoe for coughs and =I
colds. Mr. Chas. Cameron, Underwood,
says he got splendid results from using
Eby's German Breast Bnlsana and re-
commends it highly. j.
Mr. John liepner. Manager Port Elgin
Brush Co., says Eby's .Gorman Dreaaa.
Balsam is an' indispensable noceeeiby in ,
his household and recommends It as a
valuable remedy for Coughs and Colds.
Put up in 26e. and 60o. bottles. Ask
your druggists for H.
DEDD26721221l 1'3d53Ta usi
ONLY
ASKYI) )R SEWING Ren:iiiittyil5f0I
FOR Pr, OR semi,.:iee d sr
Pills PARUCULJIft3,.Pff1Ct lt.1111
SAMPLES,Ccd ttSOt VARNA'
a
Please mention this paper when reply!.
to this advertiemenb.
CHEAP
FARE
woo nodes in best ease
tion of Michigan, on line
01 111. O. R. • Faith paf<i
one .ray on purchase of
40 acres.
Write to R. M. PIIOR010,
West Bay City, Mich.
Olsen nedtlt sty tOs catarrh Is the
Bent, Easiest to Maty, war C0ieapet
9eeseri Jte
(toilsl age deisnahat of *tint he' ltoil %
feta hl tin wirecondsNt','1y41iri1:r<G s#tu.