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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1900-6-14, Page 7Julia 141 1000. A- EICY CLER'S ESCAPE, tofrrfr A. MINelnAttly e .IlN4.1010l EXPMAlence SYltb a LIMO, Mr. A,, I3. Lloyd, an English explor- er Ana missionary in Afl'Ioa, le en ardent bleycl et, Qn one of Ills rides In teal eountl'y he Met a lion, and it wits hie "soorehing" that saved him. One One moaning Mr. Lloyd started on his tvheel,for a village a few miles from the Inles1on station, Ue took the main read to Uganda, which .was a good thoroughfare about five feet wide. After cllmbing a long hill he name to the desolate. on the other side, a long, gentle slope, N hens be knew the read was smooth. . Dp went; bis feet to the coasters, and away he flew down the hill, going faster every minute. -blear the bot- tom' of the hill was a turn. On ape Preaching this, be again put his feat to the •pedals. As he rounded the curve a terrible sight burst upon him. In the middle * of• the narrow path lily a full-grown lion; its head down upon its paws, fee- ing up bill. Mr, Lloyd could not stop, or if he did stop, it would be iu the very jaws of the king of the forest. To the left was u wall of rook twenty feet high, and to the right a steep embank- ment, with the river a hundred feet below, Escape seemed imposeible. Suddenly he .remembered that the wild men he bad met were always afraid of his biayole. Perhaps a wild beast might be affected in the lame way. Therefore he did the only thing he could do. Releasing bis check on the wheel, ringing his bell, and sbout- ing with all, the power of his lunge, he forced the bicycle at its beet speed directly toward the couchant lion, The beast raised its head. 'then, seeing this unearthly creature, with ao strange a voice, rushing fearlessly upon It, it gave a blood-ourdllng yelp, and sprang to one aide just as the rider flew past. DOT'SA E O PR Y R P R PEACE, L*. On one evening -little four-year-old Dorothy had failed to remember her father in her grayer because he bad scolded her. "You must pray for papa, too Dat," said her mother. "Rut II A certain aulbority has stated that I don't want to," replied the little one, f a single female louse may' become the "But you must, Dot," said her mother, grandmother of 10;000 in eight: weeks' Dropping upon her knees. again Dot time, Some other parasitic insects added :"And for pity's sake, bless papa are said to breed even more rapidly. too, and let us boyo peace in the fans_ 1 There is but one way to exterminate ily." I them and that is to kill • the first one . --- ..._ as quickly as possible before it has AN ISLAND OE BLACK CATS. an opportunity for breeding. Thiels One of the queerest corners of the not so difficult, if one, pays •attention eerth is Chatham island, oft the to the matter, and as soon as their r. cosecs is- sus ented uses anygood pp e coae4 of Weeder. The island s bunds reliable remedy for them, of which Ln eats, Every one Vi team is tlaek, there are many, although we know They live in the crevices of the lava, of none more effluient than kerosene near the !oust, and gat 0 living by emulsion, or a mixture of kerosene, catching fish and crabs instead of one pint in £oar pints of skntimlk: rails. In that o proportion it may be used 13E WAS NOT A CLOWN. safely by a sponge .or clothe rubbing dur fly -Seo "lied me n claw,n, in to reach the skin. We remember when it was as unusual to see calves Miss Pepprey-Bow ridiculous of in the spring that were not troutl- her 1 ed with Iice, es• it is now to find n C'hu11y-\\'asn't ick flock of poultry without them and Miss Popprey--Yds, Why, the clown we hope another half century will 1n the modern circus is a mane)! un- banish them from the poultry yard urluai intelligence, wbo commands a splendid salary. as generally as the last halt century _ has from the calf pen, • LITTLE DEEDS OP KIN'•DNESS. -- Little deeds of kindness are, after \YNfi2 TO I'IyANT. a1,1 what make life lovely, and develop There are three things a farmer or the Havens of affection and sympn- g'urdener should consider betore be thy. It would be a dreary world with puts seed in the 'ground. First, what nothing but mountains in it, and a crops ;ids soil is best adapted to dreary life with nothing but heroic raise. To try to grow that which is action springing from it. not adapted to the soil is. a waste of time and labor,. Next what does he TO bIAKLv SWEEPING EASY. understand the care of best ? This is less important because if he is not To lessen the wear on brooms and r-ery stupid agricultural paper's and make sweeping easier an improved books of some kind neighbor may handle is divided into three sections, teach him enough to mn•ke him sue- the center section being a flat spring easeful with a crop of which be has plate set in the same plane with the had no previous experience. Third, broom head, which relieves pert of the strain 00 the bristles., what crop can he find a good market for without too much expense for' AGNS: Ole ACTRESSES. transportation? Nearly all the farm - Sarah" Bernhardt was born iu Paris ar's erops are in demand but the in 1844; bfi's. Kondrall, Lincolnshire, weed crop, but not all may sell well 1849; Lily Langley, M. Helices, Jer- in his own neighborhood. Think it over soy, 1851); Adelina. Patti, Madrid, before putting in the seed. se,(0'1Il- -400~0 On the Farm. NI 1l INS 1 � ► t1►- ---erviwitA5010 KITTING ON BEEP, ' AT. . Iiceboden, writes; "There is no one, breed of beef snarls bettor than all Where ander aU eircuin- fiances and conditions, The trouble with cattle from the butchers' etana- oli i istoo t t b1g shouldara, giving the tore quarters too large a proportion to the refit of the °arenas. The muscles that arexe d t r e pulse o most are the b tougheet. Poll this reason the inside two-thirds of the round is good while the outside third ie not ao good, A thick, mellow4hide-not a herd, harela lode -denotes more clean meter• than a thin bide. A straight back, well sprung rib and width of loin indi- •sates a large amount of the high-porice ed meats in Che carcass. The com- parison of animals In the show ring Is often eoclose that the awarding of this prize turns on a very small point, as a lie or a dimple in the back, which cute no figure ianl the me - fulness or profit of the animal, A typical beef animal should have e thicker neok than the dairy breeds; that flesh should begin at the front, the animal should have the greatest possible th'ickne'ss of flesh along the beck between the ehoulders'and the hips, and Lhe width of the hips should be carried forward to the shoulders, The, (Angus are the thickest fleshed beet cattle. Their greatest fault is too much of a spread of the shoulder hlades at the top. They do not ma- ture quite as quick as the Herefords. It would be hard to tell which of the beef breeds at 80 months old on the same care and feed would make the greatest gain. Young animals deve- lop muscle along with the fat and when fattened young contain alarg- er-proportion of lean meal; to the tet and hence more profitable to the butcher. The first 1,000 pounds put on a steer is the cheapest, as the an- imal is growing as well as fatten- ing, and the cost of the increase of. weight increases with age." PARASITIC INSECTS. 1848; Marie 1toee, Paris, 1848; Ellen Terry, Coventry, 1848; Mary Anderson, Sacramento, Cal„ 1859. fel? A Uz.1Q,F-Hp1ARPED ENLO.RT'• d)uugtilet Yes, 1 know Mr, Stay - lake comes very often, taut it isn't my fault, I do everything 1 can to drive him away. Old Gentleman -Fudge! I haven't Beard you 8inig to IOOi 0100, PLAINT,Y IMPOSSIBLE, Young Mr. S'Laoonoenore, who has just been accepted, -(But whvtt tvlll your tether say, el'el'ling? 'You know ha doesn't like ate any Goo welt, The Young W'omnn-\Wel1, you can't expect me to use the language in which papa will express h'ieneelf when its hears of it, I'II'E AND WHISTLN, An inventive genius lies produced a tobacco pipe which bas a whistle in the stem in order to enable the smok- er to suinmon a cab Without: taking the pipe from his month. CORN AND POTATOES, \V ten it is about lime far the Dorn and potatoes to break througb the ground go over the field with a light barrow, not alone to loosen, the eelt and break the crust if it has bak- ed at alit, butt to kill all the little weeds that are starting on the surface and trying Lo gat ahead et the orae planted, When •they' are up about two inches high repeat the harrow- ing, and continuo it until it is time to use the cultivator between the rows. The harrow not only eaves much labor in weecl killing, but either crop will look as if it had' had a fertilizing witbiti 24 hoot's after the harrow went over it, LliVfl WEIGHT Ott' CATTLE, I have tried several methods offind- tug the live 'weight of cattle, writes Mr. JPS h', Frantz, and Bind the fols lowing the most °erreot: Measure the girth around the breast just behind the shoulder bladtl and the length of the back front the tett to the fors. part of the ehouldcr blade, Multiply the gi.r'tli by the length, and if the' XI I girth ifi lees than three Leet, lnilit;a;, gay tlln profiled. by 11, and . the re- fiui't will be the ngn1bor of pounds, It between three and five feel, znut-. t4p1' by 10; if between Rive andseve en feel, 1l101111)17 by' 88; if between seven and nine feet, Mullin/I, by 81; If between nine and eloven, multiply by 40, SENTENCED TO DEATH, A (rind nal 4, Pe,iennplt lV88 Sent. oneed 'I'Jn'4e 'i'1rna8, A famous criminal in Denmark has had the unique experience of being sentenced Le death three separate tunes. Such js the leniency of Dan- ish law; or, rather, the indisposition of the Puling powers to proceed to extreme measures, that this notor- ions person, before he was tried for the third time on the oapital charge, had already been reprieved twice and relegated to prison fbr a long term, It wee In prison that he committed lairs third offense In murdering one of his jailers, He began his long saw rear of crime alt the age of 8, by setting fire to a farmhouse. In October, 1894, a c1401114l in Germany was found guilty 0£ the murder of two woman and attempts to murder others. Under. the German law sen- benne is missed for east crime, and tee 'prisoner 'ip'.this case was conse- quently twice condemned Lodeath on the capital offenses, and for the mur-- derous assaults to lb years' penal servitude. Dyspepsia's Victims. J THE CAUSE Or THE TROUBLE AND HOW TO OVERCOME IT. It Frequently Produces Ito Beebe, Doors. burn, Dizziness and Other DJetreasing Symptoms --A Mattie Polls or. Iler Re- lease. Prom the Telegraph, Quebec. the primary cause of indigestion or dy,spcpsia is lack of vitality; the ab - acnes of nerve force; too loss e of the Life-sustaining elements in the blood. No organ can properly perform its functions whenthe source of niitri- ment fails. Wien the stomach is robbed of the nutriment demaudedby halure, assimilation ceases, unnatural gases are generated and the entire system responds lo tete discord. A practical illustration of the symptoms and torture of dyspepsia is Burnished by the ease of Mrs. A. la-, bouts, who .lives in the village of Stadacona, Que. When interviewed by a reporter of the Quebec Tele- graph, Mrs. Labonde looked the pic- ture o£ vigorous health showing no taaces of the malady that had made her life for the time miserable. Speaking of her illness, Mrs. Laborite said: " For about two years I suffered clreadtully. 1817 digetetivo organs were impaired, and the food I ale did not 1llssimilate end ,tefI. tne.with afeeling of flatulency, pain and acidity of the etornach, and -frequently heartburn. This condition of affairs soon told on my system In other ways, with the result that 1 had frequent headaches, dizziness, and at Limes a dimness of vision with spots apparently dancing' before my eyes. I became so much ran down that it was with difficulty I could do my household work, and at all times I telt weak, depressed and nervous. While I was at my worst, one,af my friends, seeing that the doctor weenie': helping me, urged me to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills: My husband then got me half a dozen boxes and I began taking them. Af- ter I had used two boxes 1 began to enjoy my meals and' the various symptoms of my trouble begun to clisappear•. I continued the pills until I had used, the half dozen boxes, and I again telt perfectly well. MYIy stomach was as healthy as -ever it had been. I could sleep wall, and my lieait was clear and free from the dizziness and aches that so long helped make Die miserable. It is more than a year since 1 stopped taking the pills, and health has aonlinued batter than it was for years before.'" 14Irs. Laborite added that she wilt al- ways feel grateful to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for the misery they have released her from, and elle always advises friends who are ailing to use them. 1 D,•. Williams' Pink Pills cure by going to the root of the disease. They renew and build up•the blood, and strengthen the nerves, thus driv- ing disease from the system, Avoid. imitations by insisting that every, box you •purchase is enoleeed in a wrapper bearing the full trade mark, Dr, Williams' Pink Pills Gov Pale )(People,•11 your dealer does not keep them they 'will be sent postpaid at 50 cents a box, or sue boxes for' $2.50, by addressing ,the Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. CHILDREN HELD SACRED IN ;JAPAN. Pawns, Mme end' of•Japan to the oth- er, a child to treated as a soared thing be it one's own oe a stranger's, Bath one carries its name and address on a ticket rowed its neck, but should it indeed stray from ]some food and shelter and kindness would meet it anyavhere. - PHE•INFUSION OF CEYLON GREEN TEA issuperior to that of the Onest japed tea grown, Ll F P' � S ONS IN WAIL IIIORE RELIABLE THAN TELEGRAPH OR HORSEMEN. , 91181 Are stems 1see In Nevoetel [3ttcepona 4rrnlie-11eet They Are 4'ein')c4 en. Pre ;Herrn : Cl't'n t• SpePd of the itlyds-r'bel e i11ee io n Comatitndel'.In•bliier. The usefulness elf pigeons as mee- Sengers. fin "lime 0f war is more and more attracting the attention of military experts, and impels them to take a very keen interest in the at- tempts which are now 4eing made ee perfect the birds 1.0 the novel 'work, Hitherto messnges'have been convey ed.from one erne' corps or xrotn one regiment Ito another by means of •horsemen, bicyclists, or the telegraph but now it is claimed thatpigeons are better messeegers than any of these. They can xeaeh a given point more quickly "than any horseman or bioyciisd:, and they are more likely to carry messages safely and expedi- tlpnsly than the telegraph, since there is always the danger that the latter may be cut. It pigeons were inert machines they would doubtless have been ,used as military ,measengers long ago, but, being lively and sensitive creatures, they speedily demonstrated, when the Gest experiments were mule, that they could not under existing condi- tions long endure such work Pigeons when taken from their own note, will readiley fly bank to it, but a military messenger, service requires birds to do mush more than this. The( first ex- periments were made with movable pigeonhouses, which were placed on wheels a.nd accompanied the army. HOW THEY ARE CARRIED, In this way it was possible to send messages to the stationary cotes whence the birds hail been taken, These houses on wheels, however, could only accompany large bodies 'of cav- alry, whereas it was far more desir- able that some means should be dis- covered of safely transmitting mes- sages from small bodies of soldiers who might be reconnoitring oroth- erwise employed a good distance ahead of the main nimy. . It was clear that the only way of achieving this object was by •training pigeons to accompany soldiers on horseback, and that this could only be done by constructing cages in whiob the birds would not feel fatigued after a long. ride. Many styles of cages -some of wicker, oLh'- ers of canvas and wood; -were tried, and some .anewered the purpose ad- mirably, the result • being that the birds were soon taught to fly from their temporary homes on the horses' banks to the movable dove oote which was with the' main army many miles away. The transmission of mes- sages from outlying posts to the main army was thus greatly facilitated. 140 mailer where the movable Louse is, the pigeons who have been fed even for s• few days in it will find 11 out, and thus communisation can readily be established between two bodies of troops in motion. Heretofore pigeons have only carried messages from one stationary Gots to another; now they will just as readily perform the same service between movable houses. .that the birds are always very titled after they have Laken even a short journey. Still, in en enlel'goney,ovon those cave 'are bound to .prove of vast serviee. 1(67 THE GERMAN ARMY the Wee are carried Dither In canvas bags, welch dee strapped in front of the horsemen, or In double bags shape ed like wallets, which are carried on the horsemen's shoulders, :Each of them double h s o s. bags cont u wins two birds. Ie France the anlitary authorities, on the suggestion of Generti't :Paul de Benoistv ha e recently 1 ly pronounrled in favor et an osier cage, whitey is.shap- ed like a foot soldier's keelseek,and Which Is carried in the same manner, It has three stories, the floor of each being of wicker work, and there are side doors, through wbicli the birds can pass from one 'story to the oth- er, The walla and doors are welipad- dod, so time the birds are, 08 it were, sheathed In scabbards, their bodies be - Ing 'fully protected against all jai's and jolts, while at the same time their heads and tails are entirely free. Con, neeted with the cage 18 a small mov- able basket, in whish the birds can eat, drink and walk about, The en, tire apparalue weighs only three or roar pounds, and is therefore no en- cumbranee to the horseman. Recent experiments have shown that pigaoos do not suffer from fatigue whale they are being carried in these oages,and hence there is reason to believe that cages of this type will generally be adopted throughout Europe. 11 fa claimed that in time of war messages can ee carried by pigeons into besieged towns, and the question is now being asked, "Can they be returned to their dove cotes in spite of Abe cannonading around such towns?" 1 77 are the only C ii medicine that 1 will cure betes. Like Bright's Like Dia - kill ease this dis- y ease was in- 0lls curableunlil Dodd's Kidneyy Pills cured it. Doctor theme[ s ver confess that without Dodd's Kidney Pills they are powerless against Dia- betes, Dddd's Sidney Pills are the first medicine that ever cured Diabetes. Imitations -box, name and pill, are advertised to do so, but the medicine that dams f cure 911 x OS is Dodd's Kidney Pills. Dodd's Kidney Pills are fifty cents a box at all druggists. rmn. ,.masse ENGLAND'S COAL SUPPLY. Alitrndat ithea0xlott Regarding the Danger or the Exlrttasllon .0 Ilio Il1ae.. The Feasibility of a dual famine in Great Britain is the subject of cera- ther alarmist discussion, in England. The high cost of coal is beginning to touch many interests and industries, and should it continue at its present price, while remaining cheaper in countries which are commercial riv- ale of England, it is felt that it will do more to lessen British foreign trade than any other imaginable ca- lamity, even leer. The most serious thing in the matter is the•repidity with which the stores of coal in the. The distinction is a notable one United Kiogdam are being used up. from a military point of view, and In eonseouenae to a gree much labor has been eecesaary in or- der to achieve suet A REMARKABLE RESULT. It was easy to construct a comfort- able movable dove cote, but it was exhaustion at a relatively near per - very' difficult to ,fdshion a cage in iod. In Lanarkshire, the most import - which a couple of pigeons would feel ant of all the coalfields of Scotland t poly at, home wJ1Lie on the back and the one of all others' on which the of the large exports of coal and its increasing n00 in industry by rail- ways AUG in other ways, the supply is in many directions 'threatened with ell of a galloping horse. Delicate birds greet, manufacturing industri0s on other. like these enema beer to be jolted, the Clyde mainly depend; in South j Staffordshire, in the Forest of Denn, 011 an average only •one bullet out and at first after a long ride, theyes me fired in battle strikes hems. Dither refused Lo fly, home, or they iu Durham and Nortbumberland, and --- flew a short distance and Lhon sat- elsetvhal•e the available supplies of FOR•OYER FIFTY YEARS hills. \VINSLOw'9 aOOTRING SYRUP Inc boon tled down for a much needed test. coal are being so rtapidly depleted that near brl,tathers for their childr air.'hair I, teething. 0 sow 'fhes Especially were they. distressed by the notion of the bores if the weather was cold, and, when released from the =gee, they seldom found their way to the movable tote. Gradually, how- ever, these ditfioulties have been over- come in a lerge motlsuxe, and, as a result, it seems safe to say that pig- eons w111 in .future form part of the indispensable paraphernalia of the cavalry in et leaat three European armies. In Russia they are now carried in cages which are strapped to the shoul- ders of the horsemen. Experiments have shown that., when released, they can fly trona twenty-five to fifty kilo- metres in from eighteen to twenty- three minutes, and thus in a very short time a commander in thief can obtain exact information about the movements of an enemy wife istta day's March ahead et Mtn. These' cages are of wood and, though plentifully sup- plied with bay, are rather unwleldly and uncomfortable the rasnit being W1}1I N YOU WANT THA, ` MNi< OF C a,i Y LON1 19,le nam; delis, ebra aaaoalate4 with tea, teen, a enq,hhrauon that le Irresistible. LOAD 9faleatlea. 05, 30, 40, BO end 40a, 'lbvoe4'te, Oa shrove& 4t . m..,.... �'tl'or<A.q�^�. 'Ord'O'Ib •#i.'I .. 'lP.'1v.A.�d Thinking of patting Weigh, centrally the matter of "cheap" paint before saying it. Deh't buy stuff in the paint line, bet:auseit's sheep -it's nvI chap RAMSAY'S PAINTS are not cheap paints, hut.wlien you pay for them you pay for the bast thet's mads and when you the matter, weigh the " can " and see that yeei acre get- ting more paint to the gallon than 3:1r, you ever got before from any other.. K pp n �. (qt p Been 1800. �' -----.11, itil�ll��l 0o�, C �B n1111 fCinnjrppl . U G�U }-"- MONTREAL. are on the luny to exhaustion, and the iron industry of the country, Is becoming more dependent on the sup- plies from Spain, 1f, therefore, Eng- land cutinot replace her domestic sup- ply of coal with cheap imported fuel, she cannot hope to maihtain her ;pos- ition as a manufacturing nation, and without manutxetures and exports the whole fabric of English life, and Eng- land's commercial prosperity, will un- dergo a radical change, and the lat- ter will puss away to the country 'possessing tee 'natural advaulages England is losing. The only appar- ent remod' is to stop the export of coat by the imposition of a heavy ex- port duty. This is suggested by one writer, but, at the best, it would only be a palliative. The country at present taking the 20,000,090 tone annually ex- ported from England would find oth- er markets in which to buy, and the English !nine owners would be suf- fellas along Neiththe miners, to whom the loss of wages on the getting of so many millions of tons would tmean a good deal. The question, as willfbe seen, is not easy of solution and the discussion of it is likely to he along 0110. COULI)N'1' FIND TII.NM. A countryman -and countrymen may generally be trusted to tell the truth -relates to the Cincinnati Times - Star a story illustrative of what he calls s idiotic behavior of city a on the term, "Why," said he, "It student from the Cincinnati University visited my farm last summer, and one day, when I Wee steeling out to dig some new potatoes, he took the basket out of my hand and said he would get them. He was gone half an hour or so and came back with an empty basket. He had hunted over the whole patch, he said, and couldn't find anything but blossoms. There wasn't a siugle potato on the vines." "I really thought he woutd faint when I took the toe and began dig- ging tbent out of the ground." MOLES AND RATS CAN SIDE, Despite popular belief moles a w hate are not blind. Moles' eyes alel mbnulte In ender to ewe pain when bturro'wing under the earth. r STA.= OR LUCAS CO err. Eno, 011%0, 018 Ila FIIANR J. Cns00Y makes oath that ho is Monier partner of the firm of F. 3..CIDMIsy Co„ doing business In the Oilyof 9'0 08d0, County and State aforesaid, an eat saki RPA5 wilt Pray thssiipi of 0110 BITNDIt10p DOJ' LAR! for each and !vary Mase 81AaunaBALsiS that eaunot be cured by the use of ' OAmauRn t:ultu FRANK 1 °HENRY. Were to g4re me and subscribed in n7 presence, ties eta day of Macomber. A.D. 108* A. W.GLEASO; SEAL.: Notary Public. 'Hail's Catarrh Ours is taken internally, -and acts directly 01 the blood�tand mucous surfaces of thesystem. Sand or testlmo ials,_(Fee. Sold by Drs F. J. . MHO it EY & 0.0,, Toledo, 0. Ball's Family Fills4a9re the best. Business failures in Great Britain during 1899 were 8,800, against 8,8959 in 1898. MONTREAL NOM MEMORY. The "Balmoral," Free Bus AVENibE HODUSE-&amity ucoigeste ra2 Per day, ST. JAMES' 1101'E9.•.onroslaG.:t'.it t.Dapn: Railway. Flrst-oluss Commersiet gouge. Modern int. Prgremenia-Rates moderato. 9Y. P. C. 11027. CALVE T'S carbolic Diol nfectants, Soasee, Cine. meet, Tooth Powders, etc„ bare boon awarded 100 medals and diplomas for naperltir excellence. Thdir regular use prevent inf ort• cgs diseases. Ask your dealer to obtain A anpPI . Lists mailed free on a Plicati on. F. C. CALVERT'& CO., The New Woman Now enters upon pursuits formerly monopolizes. by man. But the fcmlii- ine. nerves are still hers and she suf- fers from tool bathe. To her we ra- oaoamend Nerviline-nerve-parr curet -cures toothac•he.i'n a moment Nerve -I line, the meat mereel lous pain remedy known to sefenee. Nerviline may be used efficaciously for all nerve pain• Over one Ili:meantl :cements are am- ployed in the Royal Hovechold. OUR BRAVE VOLUNTLI3RS Endure1 tee severe marching of the North-west campaign with admar- able foci ude. The, Government should have supplied them with it quantity of the celebrated Pullman's Painless Corn Eerie otnr. IL never fails tot remove corns painlessly, and the volunteers nasi everybody else should hive ft. K'ware of substitutes. Get Putnam's Ext rooter and Lake no more or leas serious exhaustion will Bold by ail dreg lata throegbout the world. Bo euro and ask for Mrs, Vint ow Sootlino Syrup." Pt 1, , ngan 10 t e gnma, 4 nye pan,, et vee w cos, end is Ehu hest ramedr for dinrthmn, 'Moat tonic, have to be faced within the next twenty, and soma say in the case of the deep coal of Lanarkshire, within the next ten years, The gravity of such is situation is so great that it is somewhat difficult to realize, One writer asks what will happen to England when 11 bas no more coal, or coal only obtainable at n heavy Increase in the present oast of min- ing, lAiroady the stores of iron oro EER OWN SELECTION. Harry, she said, as she watched him adjust his collar, there is one thing about you that 'like. ,Hie face brightened. What is it, dear? he questioned Why, your neckite, and as she had setetted it only chat morning he lewd no cause to be ba•Ipy, MANCHESTER - HNt3LAND, rasp Instruments, Drums, Uniforms, Etc. a Every Town G • ri have a Band Luwoti prices ever quote& Pine catalogue 5001110 Union, mailed tree. `Write ea for anyndug ie MUSIC or Musloal Instruments. Whale Royce & Co., T000nWOi1,4and FOR SALE. NATURAL BEN INCUBATOR, 100 Eno HATCH. ER, <0,505011'82 plan pplcoaetaeryrytion;1. A. V101rERS, Calgorir, Aiborte. 'TORONTO DUTTON° 90500L offers owlet adv. - to all desirous of acquiring a thorough know. ledge of Cutting dud Fitting Gentlemen's Garments. Write for particular,. 103 Yong! at., Toronto. LA Mille, Mille & HaMOS Barri steCs,eto.,removo4 to Wesley Bld a, Rion. mood St. W., Parente. Catholic Prayer D infixes, Baals,Ora, infixes, lloapulnre, Religious PlatensStatuary, and Church Ornament,• Educational work,; Mall orders reeeire prompt atter., tion. D. &J. DADLIEn & 00., Montreal. POULTRY, BUTTER, EGGS, APPLES, and other PRODUCE, to ensure boat results consign to fhe•Cawso1 Commission Co., Liniited, Oor. Wost•Market & Colborne at., Toronto, Dyeing! Weaning! For the very boateend your work to the "BRITISH AMERICAN DYEING CO." Look for agent 18 your town, or sena 81,001. Mohtreal,Toronto, Ottawa, Quebec D 0 Ori NN and Sheet MetalWorks. ROOFIN4 8LAT10 to Bleak, Red or Groan, SLATE 'BLACKBOARDS. 'We WI! Pubha and IIIgh Sokools Toroosq) Roofing 8011, Yit 1t,, 0001 Tar, Mtn, 18019, 114 1 TILE Mea New pity Bu Pe. 11,0, TOrontq, done byY oar arm), IMetnl Ceilings, Ono- nigos,eto. Eatimnt0tfurnished for work 0 omeplet° or fer materinlsahDyed to any pert of the country, rh0nt 1008 0, DUTNIE& SONS, Adelaide& WldmerSte„Toronto, FURS. FURS. Importer and exporter of New Furs and Skins, Con, eignmente solicited. High. est prices paid for glueing, Yl. JOHNSON; 404 St. Paul street, Montreal, Canada Permanent LOAN ANO 8A111008 COMPANY, Ieconrotterse 1855. The Oldest and Largest collodion Mort- gage Corporation. Paid-up Capital, - • $s,Goo;000. Reserve 'Fund, - - 1,soo,000. bead Offoe-,-Toreitto St„ Termite, Rraneh Otfloes-Wlnnlpog, Man., Vancouver, 0,0. DEP0911'8 RECEIVED. interest allowed. 1305ENTUREM I08010, for 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5 rears, with tntereOlooapone ,.noshed. MONEY 1,1PT onset/110V 01 1.011 tondo mortgages, ttoromment and Muuiaipal ponds, an, For further particulars imply to J. IieRutP.'t' MASON, Managing birtctor, Toronto..