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The Brussels Post, 1899-6-9, Page 7,TuNia O, 1909. THE BRUSSELS POST. 7 'ROX PRANCE TO AMERICA THE PATHETIC STORY OF A YOUNG FRENCH REPORTER. t-- Haiinled a Voting' LIlly'$ Il8us0 In Hain and mime, Forgetter of Food :mit the badly 11141,,lea-,tet tuned to terauoe a Na11181 and Physical N'rr,k. It may be, us, a now famous nove- list lute rbserved, that fletlon is the highest form of truth. Many of the wildeat dreams of the romancer have found 'their £* fillmsnt in real life. Yet, now and then, there eume before the'atteution of nue pulliic oases nev- er coneeived by the meet daring story tellers. OnousU1eso, aud one of the saddest imaginable, Wok its origin in Paris one year ago, and oulmtnat d. only when one of we Onura0181'8, abase, hopeless, almost insane, returned last week to the benne he had so rashly de- serted. Men nave done lnuoll fur love, and are capable, while under the in- fluenceof some very emetic: actions. Tile .course of the young Jfrenehmun in question must go down on the books as a record breaker, LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT, • The leading physudans and surgeons of 1110 world held u conforenae in Mos- cow last year, One of the gentlemen attending this oonventiun was a well- known practitioner from Chicago. ide took his wife and daughter to 1808818, and after the business part of the trip was over toured Lhe continent with them. On returning home the parents left the young girl, a. most beautilal creature, se the story goes, and, from Lhe denouement, 111eee is every reason to believe she is, to study the lan- guages at Paris. While boarding here in a quiet suburban family she became acquainted with a young Parisian re- porter, Marcus Allar. The May fell madly in love with her at first sight. He hardly waited for an introduction, but in his passionate Gallic way be- gan to pour out his affection on first acquaintance. The young lady was boarding in the same house with Al- lar's sister, for whom she had contract- ed a sincere liking. In vain did she convey through this young Frenchwo- man that Elle reporter's suit was hope- less. The other would not hear of it, and only pressed his claims the more madly. He spoke no English, and wbenever his protestations grew too ardent she turned them off by appear- ing not to understand his French. Af- ter a time his attentions grew trou- blesome and she endeavored to discour- age him; but he would not be dis- couraged. So at last elle left the board- ing house, and niter a short time re- turned to her home in Chicago. ALLAR STILL PURSUES. After she left Paris Marcus Allar was disconsolate. He went about his work for a time, then gave it up. With- out the fair one life was not worth living. At last he remembered that she had always told him that in Amer- ica there tidos room for everyone. Not considering the drawback of knowing no English he persuaded his sister that he would do well in America, and with- out delay packed up his possessions and went to Chicago, knowing that in that city was the home of the woman he adored. His first step on arriving there was to find the dwelling of the physician and his daughter. He bad little trouble in doing that. His next step was to hire a room from which he could over- look the house of the young lady. That done he set out to find employ- ment. This, however, proved a more difficult matter. His utter lack of knowledge of the English tongue prov- ed an absolute barrier to any work in his own, the newspaper profession. In his futile search be gradually exhaust- ed his means, and at last, when al- most without money, and entirely with- - out hope, he gained courage Lo pre- sent himself at the house of the girl he had followed from France. HELPLESS IN A STRANGE LAND. That the young lady was surprised needs no saying. She was more than surprised, she was startled, and when she realized why he had traveled 4,000 miice and had thus come among strang- ers she was angey and a little fright- ened. There was but one thing to be done, however. With the kindliest mom- ories of Altar's sister she set 'about to find Ibis young man some moans of support. She first secured him a place as French teacher in the home of a friend, and for awhile he held it, but he neglected the daty of teaching to follow in the wake of his benefactress. Becoming too ardent and forbidden to eall at the house be would stand for hours on Lhe walk across the street from her d00r watching for a sight of her. Neither rain nor snow had any effect in dampening his ardor, and the °oldest weather could not chill the pas- sion which burned within hits. So while ha saw his adored, he lost his position as tutor. Again he was forc- ed to seek for help, and again he was given an opportunity to take care of himself. But again to no avail. Long brooding over his love had now begun to affect his mind. He would walls up and down the street the young lady lived upon muttering to himself;, calling her nalne and talking of what he would do if she would not accept his soft. FROM BROODING TO INSANITY. But this could not last. Being with- out work he contra not pay hisrent or his beard. He sold or pawned all his possessions. Even that means was 800n gone,. and some weeks ago he was forced to apply for assistance to the head of the French Mission on the West Side. AL the mission he was unable to cam- munioate, except by signs with the doctor or his asistanis. He took no h part in any of their meetings. At meals he would sit with them, but was not 'of them, and understood nothing of what they were saying. .Often he would suddenly, bleak out in shrioles of laughter andtcould hardly bo chock- ed. Again he would weep, and Ceara would roll &own his cheeks. Ile seem- ed to lose ell control of himalelf. Such a comae could have but 000 cad. The Consul determined to mend him back. to France. Accordingly, after being well supplied with the necessary clothing, ho was taken to New York and put an a' liner for Paris, His plead - Inge when he realized that lie would nevermore see the girl for whom ho had suffers' so much were nkat piti- able, But the (8880 was utterly hope- lees. Pony months after his fatal move was Mande, ho was nn his wiry beak to his home, i11, penniless, well-nigh in= sane. MARTYRS TO BARBARISM, THE TRAGIC FATE OF A BRAVE LIT- TLE CHRISTIAN BAND \7'144 Went Porth to spread tlno Gespal In fhht-Nine Were. murdered, the )teat Were Wounded nod the missions Looted and 1111 •ned. The details of ono of the most hor- rible massacres committed in a, land or blood and pillage have just acme to light. In the early days of August, 1808, the loading journals of the globe had news of an uprising in the vicinity of Ku-cheng, China. It was reported that soma dozen or so British and American missionaries had been foully murdered; that infant children bad perished In their company, and that in the course of the depredation pro- perties to the mount of tens of thousands of dollars had been destroy- ed. This was the first account, and practically the last, though the mat- ter was widely disoussed. The cir- cumstance leading up to the revolt, and the scenes before and after, are only now at hand. Ku-cheng is a walled city of some 00,000 inhabitants. It lies 100 miles northwest of Fuohau, and is usually reached by foreigners igeesby means of native boats plying the River Min, The British Mission House at which the principal horrors occurred, was situated outside the city, about a mile across the river, and contained, besides the missionaries' residence, schools for boys and girls and a found- ling ]tomo. AMERICAN MISSION ESCAPED. Tho American Mission, In wbiob, contrary to the first report, none suf- fered death, was also outside the walls, and situated near the British grounds. The head of the British Mis- sion was Rev. R. W. Stewart. He had In his charge the field at Su-cheng and Ping-nang, winch is in the vicinity, and overseen by members of the Ke- cheng Board. To assist in this rather wide sphere of labor were seven lady missionaries, besides his wife. He had a family of five small children. Closely affiliated with him in this work was Rev. H. S. Philips, another British clergyman, who lived in a native house The Doctors Puzzled. THE PECULIAR CA- SE OF A NOVA SCOTIAN' LADY. ]'ho Trouble Regan l- in it Swelling of the Mg Toe Whirl' Spread to .411 Paris or the Hotly- Doctors could Not Ac• (Walt for the Trouble, and Their Treatment Did ,ler No flood. From the New Glasgow Enterprise. ' Loch Broom is a picturesque farm- ing hamlet situated about three miles from the town of Pictou, N. S. In this hamlet, 1n a cosy farmhouse live Mr. and Mrs. Hector McKinnon. A few years ago Mrs. McKinnon was taken with a disease that puzzled several doctors who attended her. 11 was generally known that Mrs. Mo - Kinnon owed her ultimate recovery to good health to the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People, and a re- porter of the Enterprise being in the neighborhood called upon the lady and asked her if she had any objections to relating the particulars of her illness and cure. "Indeed 1 have not," replied Mrs. McKinnon, "I think that those who are cured owe it to the medicine that brings them bock to health, always to say a good word for it. My trouble -apparently linden insignificant start- ing point. It came on with a swelling in the big toe, accompanied by intense pain. Gradually the swelling extend- ed to my limbs and then to my whole body, accompanied by pain which made, my life a burden. A doctor was called in but he slid nal' help me. Then another and another until I had four different medioal man to see me, one of them the most skilled, rhysieian in the province. Yet my case seemed to puzzle every one of thein, and none of these gave me mora than the merest temporary relief. One doctor said the trouble was inflalumaLion of the bone. Another said it was aggravated sciatica and gout. The other two called it by other mimes, but whatever it Was none of tln.ln helped me. By this time Thad got so low and weak that I could not lift hand or foot if it would save my life, and no one expected to see me get better. In feet the doctor said if I sank any lower T could net live. And yet here 1 ,am to -day its well as ever I was in my life. While I was at the lowest 0 minister called to see me and asked why I did not try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. I had tried so Many remedies and hacl spent 80 many dollars in medicine that 1 hard- ly thought it worth while to experi- ment any more. However, I was per- suaded to try them and after using u few boxes there was some improve- ment. By Lbe.timti I' had used a doz- en boxes 1 bad left any bed and was able to move around, and after a few more boxes I was again perfectly well, and able to do all the work that falls to the lot of a farmer's wife. Al] this i l owe to Dr, Williams' Pink Pills and I .think that after What they have done for ma I am justified in recom- mending them to others," Dr. Williams' Pink Pills give new life anal rfchuess..to the blood and re- build shattered nerves, thus driving but disease due to either of these two causes, and this means that they effect a cure in a large percentage of the troubles which afflict mankind. Some unscrupulous dealers impose on the public imitations of this great nee(i- eine. The genuine Dr, Williams' Pink Pile are hover sold in bulk or by the hundred al' orin08, or in any form exoepi in the company's boxes, the wrapper around which bears the Lull tendo njark, "Dr, Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People,' No ,natter whatthe color of the p111 offered in any other ahepei, it is bogus. Those pills Mire when other medikines fail. inside the city, The Dr. J. 3, Gregory mentiohed was a physieaa attached to the American Mission, 18LVOLT Ol' VEGETARIANS. The district around Ku-oheug has IMO ill 0 state Of More or less tur- moil since August, 1)04, wben a re- ligious earn known as Vegetarians were supposed to have Made a wboieeaia at - Leek on all foreigners, presumably because they were se boasUy as 10 k11) and eat of their fellow creatures. Latter developments indicated that Ibe uprisings and constant nlaraudings were not attributable to the Vegetar- ians, who were, as a rule, mild and in- offensive peasants, but tosome po- litical intriguers, the fact that sour« of the rebels had been seen to eat 000lred flesh besides the ruins of the dwellings they had burned, lending oredenee to the suspicion. In June, 1805, two months before the massacre 1n question, things began t0 look se stormy in Ku-cheng that atthe advice of their respective Consuls, the British and Amerioan missionaries re- moved 1,0 11'ucnan: toward the last of July, however, as the mandarin in charge of the district seemed to have got the rebels fairly well in hand, they returned. It was on the night of July 81 -August 1, that the murders Curr oc ea. One of the points in Chinese politics that most strikes the foreigner is the manner in which Chinese officials are not officious, There seems to be an odium attached to any municipal. position; only the poorest spirited of man aro ever put 1n .charge. Perhaps this may arise from the Emperor's re- luctance to trust any one with milh- orily. At any rate there is no country on the globe in which law is so little more than a name as in China. As stated before the city of Ku-oheng is a walled town containing over 00,- 000 inhabitants. The mandarin in charge has at his disposal about 300 soldiers, with absolutely autocratic, power he time of revolt; yet on the night of the massacre, on hearing that the Vegetarians were out again, he re- tired to his own house, barricaded it, and surrounding himself with the en- tire rldlunicipal guard, refused to stir until- the trouble was all over. Not one native hand was raised in defence of the helpless victims. EYEWITNESS'S PERSONAL NAR- RATIVE. No adult of the British Missions sur- vived to tell the tale. The beet ac- count is probably that of bliss Hert- ford, of the American Mission. She had herself the narrowest escape of the survivors. She said: "Al 7.30 in the morning' I heard shouts and screams for the servants to get up, as the Vegetarians were coming, and were tearing down the houses on the hill belonging to the English Mission. Soon after I met a Man with a trident spear. He yelled out, "Here is a foreign woman, and pointed his spear at my chest. I twist- ed it to one side. It just grazed my heed and ear. He then threw me on the ground and beat me with the wooden end of the spear. I afterward jumped down an embankment and ran till I reached the hill, when I stopped to recover my breath. The yells con- tinued, and I Saw Iwo houses being burned to the ground, "Subsequently all was quiet, and, supposing that the Vegetarians had gone, I sent a servant to inquire what ked happened. He returned and told me to Dome home, stating that five ladies belonging to the English Mission had been killed and others wounded, but that my house had not been troubled . CHILDREN NOT SPARED. "I went home, and there found Miss Codrington, much' cut about the head and beaten all over; Mildred Stewart, 12 years of age, wills her knee cut and bleeding very much; Herbert Stewart, 0 years of age, with, his head cat and almost dead; while the baby of the Stewart family had one eye black and swollen, and the second Stewart girl, Kathleen, 11 years of age, together with the second boy, 8 years of age, had been beaten and stabbed with a spear, but not seriously injured. "Rev. Philips, who lived in a house some distance away, escaped bodily in- jury, but arrived only in time to see the bodies of the dead and hear the Vegetarians cry, "We have killed all the foreigners,'' We beard that soma of the terai Hers had escaped and were in hiding, but Mr. Stewart did not come, and we began to fear the worst. Mr. Philips went to the ruins of the burned houses, and there found eight bodies, five of them unburned and three so terribly scorched as to bo unrecog- nisable." Such in briefis the testimony of a brave little woman who •went out among savages for the sake of Christ- ianity. She evidently was not terri- fied at the time 01 her trial, at least not SO much as most men would have been, .The people who go out on such missions as these become accustomed to the idea of martyrdom. Yet there evident resignation metres the steeds to those at home none the lead hor- rible. The punishment of the culprits was, of course, sufficiently horrible, when once the consuls got after the authorities, to gratify the most re- vengeful; but the blood of the 44 beasts who wore beheaded and hung on trees could not bring back the life to the dead. And as a characteristic, accompaniment to the matter, it is further stated that the soldiers wbo, at the command of the Emperor's representative, hurried to the scone, were caught pillaging the ruins for food and booty. WHALE'S TEETH AS COINAGE, Whales' teeth form the coinage of the Fiji Islands. They are painted white and red, the reel teeth being worth about 20 times as muelt as the whila. The native carries his wealth round his near, the rod and white of his coinage forming a brilliant con- trast to his black skin. 9. common and curious sight in the Fiji Island: is a newly married wife presenting her husband with a dowry of whales teeth. A PREFERRED EXCHANGE. Mrs. Hones, proudly, Tho landlord was here to -day; I gave him the quart• or's rent a»cl showed him, the baby. ,Hone:,, who was kept awake teat night. '31 would have been better, my dear, b: you had given him the better, and shilwn him the quarter's rent. s "The Least Hair r Casts a Shadow." A single drop of poison blood will, unless checked in time, make the whole impure, Hood's Sarsaparilla is the great leader in blood purifiers, 11 caste no sbadow, but brings sun- shine and health into every household, Running Sore-" My mother was troubled with rtieumatlsln In her knee for a nu{nber01 years, and it broke out Into e running sore, She took three bottles of Houd's Sarsaparilla and 18 now Well. Hood's OHVe Ointment helped to beal the eruption." Mae, Joeo FARR, O1ov4rlawne, Ancestor, Ont. Rheumatism -"I was badly afflicted with sciatle rheumatism. Consulted doe - tors without relief. Was persuaded to try Hood's Sarsaparilla, and five bottles gave me relief and enabled me to go to work." WILLIAM R. 140A00, Margarstvllle, N. S. A REMINDER. Muebb:win/1. What's the matlab with your 810010 It's stopped, Tailor. I never wind 1t up. I use it us a motto. Mashington. What do you mean? Tailor. No tick here, "A Man'§ a Man for a' That." ' Even if he has corns on both feet, BM be e is a stronger, ro rel' happier wiser h n1, h tpl er and man if he uses Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor and gets rid of the unsightly corns, painlessly and' at OD05. He who trusts everybody and he who trusts nobudy both make a great mis- take. r -- TO CURE A OOLD IN DNR DAY Take Laxative Brune Quinine 'Tablets. A11 Drug' gluts refund Om moony of it fable to cure. 210, Satan loves hypocrites because they serve him host and require no wages. al 10o .PP 1,.ls Payne, ut Granby, tide" Pharaoh 1 V cigar Manufacturer. Economy may he wealth, but you can't use it in politics to much advan- ITood'e rilla etre liver ill,the non-lrrrltatleg and tags' only onthartlo to. take 8(11, Hood's sareapar-lila. Alaidana PARAGRAPHS. POINTED N R HS. Silence is a difficult argument to beat. The course of true love 1s very often ki te-shaped. Aman Injures himself every time he wrongs another. Death makes the widow, but the spinster is maid before. In his winning ways is found the proof of a good bluffer. Every time a woman Sees a mirror she pauses to reflect. A railway curve might be properly termed a scientific crook. The doctor who gets out of patients is apt to lose his temper. A. weak back doesn't necessarily im- ply a man is behind the times. A joy is visionary when distance lends enchantment to the view, Better let your wife have a fit of hysterics than to run into debt for a silk dress or a new piano. A matinee girl says the going out of men between the acts is far less ob- jeetionoble than the coming back. A household journal says that kero- sene will remove rust from stoves. The objectionable feature about it is that in removing rust it incidentally re- moves the stove and the domestic some- times. A GREAT VICTORY After. a Short, but Hot and De- cisive Contest. The Enemy Driven Ont-Dotld's Kidney Pills the V9aMrs-Hr. Gillette' Tested Them, and 't•hry Proved True and Steadfast Frlauds. . Venalierstburg1 Ont., May 29.—Jas. R. Gillean, proprietor of the Lakeview Hotel, here, is one of the happiest men in town. For soma years past, he bas been in very poor health, and was a great sufferer from Kidney Disease. In spite of all that medical skill, and numerous remedies could do, Mr. Gil - lean grew gradually worse. His suf- ferings increased, and there seemed to be no hope of curings the disease. One day a friend called to see him, and advised him to try Dodd's Kidney Pills, tolling him they had cured a number of cases, of which' he knew, and which were all worse than Mr. Gillean's. The latter procured a box, and so much .goods did; it do him, that he bought three more. These' cured him completely, and he is now obliged to hold quite a reception, every day, eo many friends call to congratulate him oa his happy recovery. Dodd's Kidney Pills are astonishing the medical fraternity daily, by their marvellous eure2sa in caws of Bright's Disease Diabetes, Rheumatism, Lum- bago, Sciatica, Gravel, Urinary Trou- bles, Female Complaints. Blood Im- purities, and all other Kidney Diseas- es. Many physicians in this district prescribe them in their practice, al- ways with the best results. Kidney Diseases cannot resist the ac- tion of Dodd's Kidney Pi11s, wlliah are the only cure on earth for such dis- ea8e6. ' Docld's Kidney Pills are sold by all druggists at fifty cents a box, six boxes $2.60, or will be sent, on receipt of price, by The Dodd's Medicine Co„ Limited, Toronto, Good opportunities are lost to the lover who knows not 110W to embrace them, Have You Neuralgia ? If you suffer its agonies, and fail to get a remedy, we want you to try Norvlline. Its action on nerve poi» is simply marvellous. Nerviline is the most pleasant and powerful remedy in the market. Try it. Don't believe those who praise you and speak in derogation of others. wv, KeEi ' 1E% p A."., YWpnand pi138n. LLOYD WOOD, ToronEo, GENERAL AGENT. When a man is conceited that is about the only satisfaction he gets out of life. L. ® ® lir' �? g 0!,2, new life to the R Y •. Sf' .R'. I{alr. It maker It Rrox �le,� i `1mY and reetoren tba actor. Sold by all druggists. 500. a bottle. Many a so-called fire -proof building has furnished indisputable proof of a fire. Por Over Pllty Years MRS. WINSLOW'S 5001)0117O SYRUP has bee. hued b ,others for their 0811 :ren teething. It soothe. bUm child, .often the gums, alloys all pain, 'eros wind polio, and Is the best remedy for dlnrrbo t. M. a bot• sere end eek for ' draggle' Winslow's Soothing Syru Ip.' Be If a man avoids scraping acquaint- ances he misses lots of scrapes ac- quaintances get a man into. La Toscana, 10o. 1tF7UANcm 010AR FAC'1'Ofiy, Montreal. The smaller the woman, the easier it is for her to twist a big man around her finger. r -- Hotel Carsiake *Eurasian Plan. RoOmo 0.1,I5, Station, Montreal. neo, Om.lakkdaop`ropp.p. The wine -bottler is a corker, but he makes less noise in the world than the unoorker. Fin TATE OF OHI(, CITY OF TOLEDO ea. LUCAS COUNTY, I FRANK .1. CHENEY makes oath that h ele the senior partner of the firm of F. J. OBENEY & 00., doing business 1n the City of Toledo. County and State aforesaid, and that said Orin will pay ilia sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL. LABS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be oured by the use of HAWS CATARRH CURE. FRANK J. CHIENEY. Swore to before mo, and subscribed in my presence, this Rh dry of Docoi1n�ber, A.D. 1886. r l A. W.GLEiASON SEAL Notary Public. Hall's ectlyro Onre fs taken internally, and fats directly y on i. S blood and minims rue, tapes of thenyate 0 Send for E 00,, ,'mels, tree, F. J. CHENIEY & 00., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggist,' 700, Hall's Family Pills are the best. ONE UMBRELLA LESS. Mr. Spinks—Why did you give Bill- ington that cotton umbrella? He'll never bring it back. Mrs. Spinks—The only other one In the rack was silk. You should have given him, that. Humph) If he wouldn't return the cotton one, why should he return the silk one? Tell me that, Mr. Spinks. Mr. Spinks—The cotton one was his. W. 1". C. 974 CALVERT'S Owrtaol to Disinfectants, Soaps, Clnt. Mont, Tooth Powders, etc„ have bean &worried 100 medals and dilomas for superior excellence. Their regular use prevent intern. ous diseases. Ask your dealer to obtain a supply. Lists mailed free on application. F. C. CALVERT & CO., MANONESTER, - - ENGLAND, BRASS ZAND I7zstrunzents, Drums, Ur afornzs, etc. Every town can have a band. Lowed prices ever voted. Fine oatnl og11, 600 trntlone, mailed free. Write tut tor anything in WHALEY ROYCE &ICC ,ITh• Toronto, Can. ONB 2. wE 1 !i F 831 Corn Curr. Aek ymp �`�d iY f5A I�� draggle tor[L Price lot MONTREAL The " Ottlmoral," Free Rus li,10gt;,i Rheuumatism—°are nseured ln24 hours. ,rone`,aal6n eent6ymal on recaint of il. DR. ROUBY, P,O, i30z 3316, Moutroal. CUTTING SCHOOL— Tallore and Drier m06'en Bend too . alma. C. & 0, SCHOOL CO„ Ainntreul. Cathoilo Pra orSeeke,Roaapula,'ru- y o1 Church Scapulars, ROW., Pictures, S,n'ilary, and Church Oruanrnoa, Eduontional Works. 8 orders receive prompt "troy Ilon1 D. & J,, BAOLIER & 00„ Montreal. aepemMlyyo0 e Stammerers waig whore, write to Dr, AruoEt, Berlin whowill nndvoeyou /moan ourayou The Dawson Commission Co., Linlite.J Oor. West -Market & Colborne St., Toronto 0o Poulty and chlor yrotluoee, 1(1 nnhlpn1110 hcon o' • Halos, l , removed Wesle'tgs R1eh m fornto. COMMON SENSE KILLS Roaches, Bed doge, Rats And biles. Sold by all Druggletg, or 381 Quern W. Toronto. DON'T YOU THINK It is about time you were using ELLA Lead packages. CEYLON TEA. 25, 30, 4o, oro & doe, IGa Tho Talisman aptivatln E of Beauty 011�/n'dn olnplexlon Beautiful se 0 tura•leaf : Wear, soft and rel. Yety "S un bdent'o, Dan 1,e uptainod. Hent tree es nppllootlou. A THE TALISMAN 00, 77 VICTORIA OT., TORONTO. 'MANITOBA LAND - NEAR POST • OFFIC E, eehnot 0tatlon• Sl.O per We. re. v Place Toroolo. CLAltK2. 2{ A.Yauu � Orr work I0 (31, i14 hy city 1,00000 gr,. all $25 to practical cutter, We trach 3'on to $b0.®Q out, Write fur terns, 0. W. BUNT & 00„ Toronto, Tailors A U HARRIS LEAD 7-C PIE, (RA85. Wholesale only. Looe Dian:nee Telephone 1720. WILLIAM 87'., TORONTO.__ ,''SakingPowder. Fonnulo to make If T! • , tor, anally Ina( .1 amen damps. Egvul to the Oast. Formula aunt [pr' 124 in otnm ,d. �. LAPIF.RRE, 19 Lawyer Sl., hTuntr0nl, VV T. ASHBRIDGE, C.E., (04 TEMPLE BUILDING, - TORONTO. Plane,. Estimates, etc., for Muni mlpel and Private Sewerage and Water SUpply YNWATZ DRAIN/LOX ANA 1M 1'llawgA1ENTS, Bridge Fouadaaone, Concrete Cenrtruotlov, Eta, m,s "BEAVER BRAND" Maokintoeh never hordeoe & Is guaranteed Waters em Proof, Rubber Clot0,0 hing Co., Monake no treal. TORONTO Cutting School odors special advantages to all desirous of acquiring a thorough knowledge of Oohing and Fitting Gentlemen's Garments. write for particulars. 113 tango Bt, Toronto. WHITE'S BROMO SWJA An Egervoealog Phosphate excellent cleanser for liver kidney and enmesh, takes Lhe plea, of coal tar prepare. lions llldruggism of ts yin 104250 0o afoot pnokeges. Oanld by adlan Brame 0.„ 274 Wellington-at.E.,Teronto. EYEIWISEMOTHERKS°WS THE V ILUK OF art, OMANS ALM (jNDI j ASA PARTURIENT MEDICINE, $150 will, IF TAKEN at ONCE, buy a PATENT MEDICINE BUSINESS, stock sufficient to make $3,000 worth. No other pill like it on market. Fortune for energetic man. Box 17, TRUTH OFFICE. Shannon 167TRAN785SFEFILERS and . 05865, Filo Omnplete 51.00. Board and Arab 60c. Simples, Board and Arch, 26o. (ij' 311 Binding 011808, d3.0,1 per doses complete. — t. The 01480. Specialty Mfg. Oo„ Limine Ii!V`i 122 and 124 Bay St., TORONTO. Factory: Newmarket. AMBITIOUS MEN with push and energy eau secure permanent, profitable p_sitions ,sour exclusive deniers, Little capital required W e have established over 500 young men in ming buel- nanee of their own, and we are ready to doth0some for you. Enterprising merchants aleo reprewnt us, with profit to themselves end absolute entisfootlon to their customer., Write us to -day for full particulars. You earn shatter perann5uge from our goods than from soy other atapl, line. NORCO M'F'C CO., Toronto, Can. ideal Leather Polis[ Will keep your shoes soft as velvet MADE IN ALL COLORS. SOLD EVERYWHERE. cylaoor °a., ,.;' 800(118Eaglaa ? i. Lard �"-, 1 1 Macnma NOOI81OlM . Dynamos castor Cormania Oil Go., 13 u Say St., Toronto, Hotel and Saloon mea ane IOE aHOrdt O4a WitAttach- ment, 0 it the AforIt if Faucet Adrew- ingbe n. No o drip, Itself In ens nroekdnw- Inehan Nodawnncwaste.Yononlyhead betn c se drewbeer With theAutomatic_y�6ut in case of hand you can bold glntlo is aneb lwayanre, ,l the e Automatic it always ready. The Aueer end d1, 000 the for any trade, nn beer and is eked for any Linde, be lr that theyou wad of beadon.Price 81 the bear that money5refs refundedIfn trn etom- toly. Hamilton Mfgeo.,Toroelo L. COFFEE & CO 00tam301041., CRAIN AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Rome 400.12 Board of Trade Building, TO/WNW, ONT. THCMA5 FLYNN .7088 L. Curt DORILine ROYAL AHr MSIPS Montreal and Quebec to Liverpool. Large and fast Stearners \rancouvcr, Dominion, Scotsman, Cambroman, Sates of passage; -First Cobb t 860 'upw'ards i Second l2ubin,1)33; Steerage, 522110 alit 1313 00. For further Into, marlin, apply to local agents, or DAVID 18011RANCE k CO., General Agents, 17 St, Sacrament. BL, Montreal, TRY OUR 0415, PAONINO & EN01NEE88' supPL.IRB. TheWm, Sutton f Compound Co. !" - lI,lmltO,t, Consulting Ma a� 180 (IL East tln IneoreOftleo: Toronto, Canada, De Laval Cream Soparattlrs, ALPHA ---NAND AND POWBR. CANADIAN NY SCPPLY CO,, Of Montreal and Winnipeg Sole Agents for Canada. FREE Rus GhInd1sochnei (nor n:111a11I,1Dnh,llelhnp�bka "�l peileho5yA 5048.80* 7710141 40m4e1, Ara,., 70 Iron re IN 101, as, 00 100 e.11 re IN 1140 an Mail. LI seg a'710EE ly return 10111. Llbemlepgeoe e'ian,1(1,p08 h.ted, Vo..lOgeod, ratornebld MO'SOS SUPPLY 410., Dept, %' Termite, 'Onto Michigan Land for Salo, el 000 A05E8 0000 FARMING LANDS-ARENAOO, y 10000 ()gateau, and Crawford counties, Title p ret. on 111,..hla6au Centra, 0410118 Maok qam ail 000 Lake Railroad% at. prl a0 08001pg from 05 to [set. sora. Thuaa 180090 arm 01000 to ill borprdd1oy nod remora ble tonna, Rohoole eW„ nod will bo said n /nod (00,000410 800100 Apply to It. M. PIEROE, Aunt, Wart Bay Ohy, 80106. Or J. W. CURTIS, Whittemore, Moll. FREE i Fat /rep; Weta6, with gguard or o5,atelal0e toreolllegt dos. of err full•slr,d Litten Doylteeatl0o. each; Ledy'e OterllogSllver Watch for selling B dos. Doylies In latedl and sight.aeWritrin8 we good Miers postpaid, Bea them, return our money:Ind we promptlyforward your Womlible, LINENDYL{'00., Dept.. ' z, Taranto. T` 1•1721 SEND ETEI OROUCH 1�o TAIOCUE, aneoaneore CANOE OA to V (Lumen.) Ontario Canoe Co J. Z. ROGERS, Manager. I PETERDOROUCHr ONTARIO, r CANADA.. THE MOST NUTRITIOUS. EPPS'S GRATEFUL—COMFORTING, 0000A BREAKFAST—SUPPEIL Hobbs Hardware Co. LONDON. INDER HIGHEST.. GRADES. LOWEST PRICES. TWINE. Dealers, Ask For Quotations. Deafness aHEA6 N 0 1 8 E 8 relieved by T H I COMMON SENSE SARDRUMB. Made of eon rubber. are °are, eons. fortable and invisible. Write f pamphlet showing benefit In oases Catarrhal Deatnwe, Roaring Rhein Sound, Relaxed, Sunk and Thickened Drums. The Common Sense Ear Drum & Medicine Co,, Limited, Freehold Building, Taranto. SOLD PLATED. 2:11114wl It to with demo .0d 7» d we will forexforward rklt w.trh,t to) 0x)108 acv .a.&so000. n Me '07d .efaocae6.0dtwilaenl y (0.4bSogmve7.. 1ou33 ey wm! a •jemll,d Kodyi „onuntill ,,ddra good ..0 o , .0d 4 JIot rile 800,, ler bg81,00pr. e.. lr 044.0a� nl ne ellen and 0hIo eed, tb ay M ergo,, 0411 yeontt.. pest Terry Watch Co„ Toronto, Dat. We give this 4 -Blade Pearl Handle KNIFE for selling' 6 packages of our ELITE PENS at Io cents per pack- age (I doz. pens in each package. Simply send your address and we will forward rim Pens poetpald, When sort' send the 00 cent and we will scud Knife with all charges paid. Address, Cern Novelty Co.,Toronto, Ont, ALLA ROYAL MAIL STEAMERS S LINE ST. LAWRENCE ROUTE, MONTREAL. TO LIVERPOOL. SUMMER SAILINGS& NUMIDTAN-May 0 J;;; 10, July 16. CALIFORNIAN- May 13. Joao 17, July 20. GA'LLIA-May 20 Juno2l. COItODONGA-airy 27, July 1. Cabin Passage-$50.OG end upward.. Remand Cabin -$35.00 100Enra 500,50, Stoorago-Livorpool.Londoo, Glasgow, Londonderry Qneonstown, $23.531. For further information Apply to N. 11001IL1ER, 77 Yonge St., Toronto, or N. & A. ALLAN, Montreal. HEALTH RESTORZ'II 010ip0na toclhi mE 6amrdered stumxuh, LungRe, Nerves, LIrar, 881096, Bladder, Otdnaya, Drain cud Beath by Q�'•'' p Revalonta u re Arabloa Food, which Save° Invalids cud 0hlidrou, and also Rears Oa 000etully Infants wboeo Aliments and Debility have re- eisted all other treatment.. It dlgoeta wl,on all :other Food igrrlooted, ,uvw 60 times ire coat in modiel0., 50 years' 3uvarlablc Bursae”, 300,000 Anmml Ome. of COnenpa. thin, o I,on tbetes err is, WM e810,oue' Asthma, Catarrh, Diarrhoes, Noreen': Debility, Bleeplelu2e,,Despondency, Du D 'rry V6 Go., los, o, Wee Imists, 14 Rue everywhere, e Cwhl lion end Loudon, pg , a or 5833 14,, wad. Stores ever where In Ude at all Oeoo. s, a Y , 2a,�. ie, 8tb,,BI,o S,IE a,,o 35. tre0' Atoo Dg. Bs . ra oo,I %'1,. .Inthis$e 0d,endih, Aglaia for °wok t The T. Eaton Co., Limited, Toronto. CANADA PERMANENT T Loan and Savings Company. 0000001.1.00050 01565, PBld.up. Capital;,,,,,,,02,0oorooa Reserve Fund,,,,,,,,,.,, 1,100,000 Head Office -Toronto Gt., Toronto. Branch Ofrl5sn-Winnipeg, Mao., Vaeeouverr 0.0. LEPO OlSTSro remind et Intoroet, pold or Darr pmt n4C4 If yearly. bnnENTt1,L1:S Issued In Currency et Sterling with interest aoupeme attached; payable In Canada br In n neelsea. Emanate and Tni0tror aro bu8184*' sed by law to 104000E 1n the D0lniniu 0, of 41415 °plunmmy, HONEY MINA NEED on Real oedltl tenni y et current ratty and errforernbla eondltionr en to l re, mpayment, ortscos and Municipal .a1 Debenture0 nr based, J. IteR1111 T mAsoN Mwdrgteg tomato.