HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1889-4-5, Page 3APRIL u, 1889.
T IBRT7SSElS POST.
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lIOUSEEEOLD, as if thereby they could avenge themselves
upon fate; °there grow despendinp and
Churning.
Come, yellow butter, come I
Her [Job, bare arms are tired of toiling u
and down
Ah, patient little worker 1 there e
stands,
In tuoked.up gown,
And lifts the dasher high with burnin
rosy handl:,
Yellow butter, come I
Come, yellow butter, some I
'She, sighing, bends to wonder in the ohurn
deep wall,
And wipe the spattered drops eo oarefull
A cool, sweet smell
Tho bubbly Dream Benda up. Now stn
dior toils she I
Yellow butter, come 1
Como, yellow butter, come I
'Her warm choke amulet glow, her breat
is panting fact;
The old churn totters to and fro; -
0 oomo at last
-Ah, pleasant sound, the thin milk n gur
plash below 1
Yellow butter, oomo 1
hopeless; but a third ohms of men will
rouse themoolvea just et such moments, and
say to thcroselvee, "The more dilfiault it is
to obtain my end, the more honourable it
will he," And this le a maxim which every
one should impress upon himself as an in.
h0 'flexible law. Some of thoeo who are guided
by it prosecute their plana with obstinacy,
and so pariah ; others, who are more prop.
g
bion! mon, if they have failed in one way,
u ill try another.
Odds and Ends of Vaine,
e
It le said that a teaspoonful of salt pub into
y. a kerogene lamp will improve the quality of
the light.
r- Gum camphor is offensive to mite and will
keep them away from plasma whore it ie soot.
tered about.
He lives long who lives well. The secret
h truth of thie maxim lies in the interpretation
of the lash word.
Ono teaspoonful of ammonia to a teacup.
ful of water applied with a rag will olean
rg silver or gold jewelry.
Dust Shedding Fabrics,
The return of duet.shedding wool fabrics
can be no longer a matter of doubt. The
day of the beautiful dull rough surfaced
woolen has gone by. It is more becoming
than gleac.finiohed fabriae ; ft lends itself
graoefully to intrioatedrepery, bubitoatohes
he duet and in spite of every mere soon be.
omen unfit for wear. A variety of fine goods
shown in market, which supply the de.
mond for a light wool areae which will shed
duet. There are mohaire in all colors and
bleak, in plain, striped and figured goods.
There are camoline silks, and old goods un-
der a now name, being a durable weave of
old•fashionod wool poplin, and there are also
many Berges woven in the firm finish of
French good, which supply the season a de-
mand.
The new mohaire are shown in all the
der,. anodes and Light tints of the season.
All colors in woolen goods are more decided
this season and have less of thefade tint of
the laeb few years. Pure shades of gray and
of Suede color, darker tobacco brown, rose -
da green, grayish steel blue, sand gray
colors and rush green tints, known this
season As dragon green, are all shown in mo-
hair, in stripes and plain colors, which will
be need for entire suits or in combinations.
Blank mohair': or brilliantinee will be come
bind with blaok moire silk and satin aurah,
or made up in solid gowns. Drosses in fine
stripe° ha solid color in sand gray, dark ste'1
blue, or dark green are exceedingly pretty
and make travelling dresses and driving
dresses which will shed the duet. Some of
the prettiest mohairs are finished with
etripee of silk or mohair as a border. Theee
striped borders then constitute the entire
trimming of the dress. White and pale -
tinted mohair dresses figured to conventional
and realiatio patterns will no doubt rival
°bellies thio hummer for afternoon wear.
They are nob as pretty and becoming as
oha111ee, but they wear so much longer
without showing soil, that economical women
will prefer them, These dresses will be
made with short, full Roomier waists, full
sstets, with sashes at the wallet, or in some
simple manner in Empire style, with trim-
mings of dark velvet. Pale white grounds
of mohair strewn with grass and leaf pat-
terne and finiobed with Duffs, collar and
panels of dark grave green velvet are es-
peoially pretty. Theee mohaire are also
pretty in the pale rose tints with trimmings
of black velvet, rose and black being a favor•
ibe combination of color.
GOOD HOUSEKEEPING,
To Wash All -Woof Fabrics.
The beet way to wash all•wool fabric°, or
those that have a fair mixture of wool in
them, is to make a hot nude of good soap, in
which pub a tablespoonful or two of
ammonia. If possible to make clean with.
out, do not rub soap on the fabri°a as it
fulls them up badly. Rub the clothes in
this and rinse in clear, hot water.
Hang them up to dry oub of doors
when the weather is suitable, but never
in stormy or freezing weather. Stretch
them to shape whoa hung up, and
it possible iron them while they are yet
damp. Never use soap in the rinsing water,
but see to it bhab the soap used in rubbing
them is well rinsed out, Flannels washed
in this manner will be oft and pliable,
even unto old ago, but they should never
be trusted to the pare of servants entirely.
Fireside Wisdom.
A neat bit of proverbial philosophy, said
to be of Japanese origin, is, " Be like the
tree which oovere with flowers the hand
that shakes it."
If a man does nob make new acquaintances
as he advances through life, he will soon
find himself left alone. A man should keep
his friendship, eo to sneak, in constant re.
pair.
Tao noble and bbe pure are fond of the
home of their childhood and of those who
sat with them round its old fireplace. That
man is to be distrusted who loves not his
brother ; and the woman who loves not her
eider is, except in rare peouliar instances,
a woman who se not herself beloved.
Wit undirected by benevolence generally
fafle into personal satire, the keenest inebru•
wont of unkindneoe. Ili% eo easy to laugh
at the expense of our friends and neighbours
—they furnish such ready materiale for our
wit—that all the moral loroes should be are
rayed against the propensity and its earliest
indiaabions °hooked,
Ibis not encouraging to do favours for
another when we are left in uncertainty as
to whether theyare w re wale m
o e or not • man.
a large•hearted nd generous nature is thrust
bank upon itself by the oold or reluctant or
indifferent way in which its favors are re.
oelved. If we analyse the feeling which
prompts tide ungraciousness, ib resolves itself
into a selfishueseaspronounoed as bhab which
huge its own poes08sions with an unfiiuehing
grasp.
The experiences of many observing per-
sons have satisfied them that the chief
soureee of family friction are, on the part of
the husband, a domineering disposition ; on
the part of the wife, frivolity ; and of both
together, selflahnese or want of ooneidora•
tion. All are the faults of undeveloped
natures, and not of •marring°, though olote
,astooiation may intone* them. Sometimes
these faults are reversed—ib is the husband
who looks depth and character, and the
wife ,vao rules with a rod of iron,
The differences of bhara0ter are never
more distinctly aeon than In time when
mon are surrounded by difficulties and mis.
fortunes. There are some who, when dim•
appointed by the failure of an undertaking
from which they had expected great things,
make up their minds at ono° to exert them-
selves no longer again[ what they call Tata,
Plaster of pane is an excellent material
for sealing catsup and fruit bottles or jugs
and la more easily applied than sealing -wax.
Strong reuriatio acid applied with a cloth
and the spot waohed thoroughly with water,
is recommended to remove inkstains trout
boards.
One ounce each of olovee, cedar and rhu-
barb pulveriz'd together, makes a good per-
fume for closets and drawers and helps to
prevent moths.
Crookery bhab has become "soaked" with
grease may be cleansed by slow boiling in
weak lye. It Is a question, however,
weather it is worth the trouble.
A teaopoonfui or more of powdered borax
thrown into the bath tub while bathing will
communicate a velvety softness to the water,
and at the same time invigorate and redb the
bather. Persona troubled wlbh nervousness
or wakeful nights will find this kind of bath
of great benefit.
,",d Mr. Walter's Relation to the "Times."
The expenses of the Parnell Commission
op to this, the 54th day, to the "Times "
have been 6110.000, and they are still going
on at the rata of about £1,500 a day. The
other side's expenditures aro nob nearly so
heavy, but as Sir Charles Russell gets a
thousand pounds a weak, it will be under.
stood that they are not inconsiderable. I
have,heard, bub I don't know how true it is,
that Mr, Walter intends to bear thio great
burden himself, oven if he has to sell his es.
tate of Bearwood. The position in which
he:stands is certainly peouliar. He is a corn.
parabively email proprietor of the " Times,"
in fact he has only a sixteenth and a half
share of the paper. This has been inter.
prated to mean that he has half the "Times"
and a sixteenth, but the interpretation is fat.
laoioue. His wealth is derived nob from
the " Times " itself, but from a contract to
produce and print i6. The printing Is
done a000rding to schedule, The copyright
of the Times is not his. His agreements
with the proprietory may be revised every
three years. Bub the Times office belongs
to him. The Times staff is his, All the
machinery all the organization by which the
Times is made a great paper are in his hands.
The proprietors of the Times gen neither
appoint nor dismiss either editor, leader -
writer or correspondent. If the contract
were broken the Times plight appear next
day under a new name ; exactly ae it did
the previone day, whereas the proprietor
would have to issue a new paper under the
old name, Mr. Walter is therefore master of
the situation. One can understand that he
shrinks from throwing upon his fellow -pro-
prietors a ruinous burden which they have
done nothing to create and he has assisted
to pile up.
A snaky Paradise.
Ceylon, the sunny isle—"where every
prospect pleases and man alone is vile," is
inhabited by half a dozen different races,
some of which eon hardly be said to evinoe
more that the average degree of human
malice ; but it would be a still greater mis-
take to suppose that the occasional vileness
of local phenomena is limited to the two.
legged products of that qualified paradise.
Its serpents are nob content with posing in
the foliage of forbidden trees, but invade
the banana orchards and even the cabins
of the natives. The family of gnats is
represented by at load twenty dif•
ferent species, filling the air of the
coast swamps in swarms which, in
the words of a recent explorer ' fall
upon the traveller like a shower of hot
aches." The foot hills are lees cloudy, but
wriggle with land leeches and scorpions,
while the highlands are haunted by leopards
that will crouch down Int in the fork of a
roadside tree, where they remain motionless
for hours, starving with the fortitude of a
Texas temperance editor, to get a good
chance toounce on the neok of an unwary
rambler. Troops of eupeptio money raid
the fruit plantations with an effrontery ex•
oeeded only by the hardihood of the frugi.
vorous bats, that will enter an open sky.
light and devour the provisions , • epended
over the very heads of the sloe; In ; rustics.
The plagues of the neighborin„ mainland
sometime appear in the form of migratory
locust swarms.
An African Boy's Snooesa.
Thirty years ago, just about the time
when the big African lakee were disoovered
there lived in Uayamwozi, a boy named
Msidi, who has since become famous. His
father went every now and then several
hundreds of miles from home to the great
Dopper country of Sanga to buy bbe metal
from native miners. When Mobil became a
young man his father took him on some of
these ex
o t`
di
p ren s. Finally Msidi started
out to buy oopper on his own account. He
arrived in the mineral region once when the
big chief of the Sanga country was at war
with a great tribe who were invading bis
dietrlob from the north, Msidi had with him
four guns and plenty of ammunition. Fire-
arms had never been heard of in that country,
and when Maid! marched out to win a battle
for hie friend, the chief of Sanga, the enemy
fled In great diemay after a fow shots. Just
as a few of Livingstone's Makololo per -
tare with only nine guns oohquersd the
whole Shire. country and set up as little
kings, so Msidi laid the foundation of his
fortune with four gone. The old chief fait'
so grateful to Msidi that he made the young
man his heir. He died soon after and the
humble ivory trader suddenly became the)
chief of quite a large country. He killed all'
bhe ohlofe he thought might become his
rivals, carried on aggressive warfare against
all bhe surrounding tribes, gradually spread
his dominion, and is still extending it.
Livingstone's Oamzembo and the greatest
and the Mutate Yamva used to be talked of ,
as the greatest chiefs west of the big lakes.
Hindus says that Msidi is now without
doubt the most powerful ruler in the Congo
has'uf.
St, Bernard Dogs,
Geoffrey Williston Christine in a very i
boresbing article on Our Gamine Friend
published in bho Chicago Journal, speaks
the noble S. Bernard doge as foliows t
1 am often asked white kind of doge a
most easily trained. To answer that quo
tion It Moet firer be obeorved that dogs ar
divided into two deems—the long and th
short haired—of the iongg•httred, St. Sc
nards and Newfoundlands ars the moot in
telligenb, and therefore the easiest to train
Indeed, the SI, 'Bernard Is the king of a
dogs, towering ee far above all °there into!.
leotually as in stature and in the price he
commands—more than 55000 having been
paid for t+ fine St. Bernard. These dogs are
also of two kinds—the long and the short
coat St, Bernard—though they both belong
to the elan of long-haired dogs. Of the two,
I think the long oat daemons the prefer.
once. The Se, Bernard has a neturaI fond.
nese for anew, just as the Newfoundland hae
an Innate love for the water, and he;may be
called a snow dog with ae much propriety
as the Newfoundland is styled a water dog,
On being taken where there ie snow he will
lie down and roll in it, fill his mouth with it,
toss it up with hue paws, and in every way
possible evince the keenest delight ob the com-
ing in oontaob with i6. It is this character.
isaio, together with his great doe and
strength; which so peouliarly fits him for tin
noble work of reaming the travelers ti
whioh be hae so long been devoted in tilt
Alps. Some years ago 1 visited some of th
monasteries of the mania) of St. Barnard fol
the purpose of seeing the manner in phial
these dogs are trained to their life work,
There. I realized for the brat time what a
grand, noble thing the eduoation of oven a
dog may be when it has a high and lofty
aim. The monks begin to teach their dogs
in the early stages of pnppyhood, and nob
only fe physical and mental braining includ-
ed in this teaching, bub spiritual culture is
by no means neglected. Ab meal time the
dogs all sib in a row, each with a tin diet be-
fore him containing hie repaeb. Grace is
said by one of the monks, the dogs sitting
motionless meanwhile with reverentially
bowed heads. Not one of them stirs until
" amen " is spoken. If some young novitiate
should venturebolbaete the 'contents of his dish
ere the arrival of the proper time some of
the older dogs forwith cause him to desist
by deep admonitory growls and sharp pull.
ing of the ear, The intelligence displayed
by those animals in rescuing travelers is
simply marvelous, though perhaps you will
say ib is only memory that they show, for
all that they do has been most carefully
taught them by the monke, After a severe
snow storm or an avalanche two dogs are
sent out from the monastery alone. Around
the nook of one is fastened a flask of cordial
and to the back of the other is bound a
heavy blanket. If a traveler lits buried in
the snow their keen scent aeon brings them
to him. Then they search for the plane
where the snow f0 softest, for they know
that it is the warmth of the traveler'° breath
that has made it so, and that beneath that
spot mus; lie his head. They scratch away
the snow, and when the unfortunate's head
and breasb are exposed, they devote all their
efforts to arousing him from that lethargic
slumber into which he has fallen—the sure
precursor of that terrible ond—freezing to
death. W ibh their powerful paws they smite
him on the cheat and face. With their
menthe Mose to his ear they give vent to
loud barks and cries. Meanwhile two other
doge, accompanied by the monks, have left
the monastery a short time after the former
ones, whose trail they follow, the resulb
being that the almost frozen traveler soon
&de himself well housed and fed and res•
tored to wormth and Iife. Few people have
any idea of the immenee number of lives that
have been saved in this manner by these
dogs. In the British Museum there is the
stuffed skin of "Barry," the moat famous of
all St. Bernard doge, who enjoyed a well -
verified record of having saved forty lives.
Of short -haired dogs the most easily trained
s the pointer. A dog that is very eusoep•
tibia to training and one that is nob very
generally known is the Chesapeake Bay wat-
er dog, which is of a liver color and bears a
close resemblance to an Irish setter.
0-
0,
of
80
0
e
r.
11
Kisses that gill.
A little Detroit girl ran to her mother
with this curious request
"Mamma, please feel my head and see
my scalp is loose."
"What are you talking about P" inquired
the surprised mother.
"Why, everybody who goes past me
rubs the top of my head and it feels awe
fut."
The child was nix years old, a brlght little
thing, with hair out pompadour, and i6
offered a chance to people passing her to
try and smooth i6 down. The mother was
justly angry.
"Hazel," sbe said, "I have half a mind
to label you 'Hands off,' as they do walla
ablee in stone. Why don't you make peso.
pie let you alone 1"
"I oan'b, mamma, when they say I'm a
mien little girl, and want to kiss me."
The child's remark led bo a discussion
between those present, among whom was a
trained nurse.
"I have something to say on this pro.
miaououe habit of handling children," she
said. "I have been for the past six weeks
taking Dare of a child belonging to a family
on Macomb street, I took oars of the
mother when the child was born, and it
was e fine baby. It was nearly a year old
when the family sent for me to come and
nurse ib in its last Bioknees. The little thing
died a week ago, and uhe doctor gave eon•
sumption as the disease. The child wee
realy kissed to death."
"What do you mean P"
"Just what I say. She was a sweet
little baby and the first one in the family.
The grandmother, two young aunts and an
uncle lived there—the young couple board.
ed at home—andthe baby wasawakened out
of its sleep bo be oarried down and shown
to visitors and kissed by the company and
al its relatives. he b
1 ry s. T mother ho was sick a
good deal and would send for me off and on
to take care of her. They had that baby at
the table in a high °hair when it was three
months old and every ono of them would
Ivies 16 a half a dozen times before the m
was over . They handled it eo muo °al
didn't have achance bo grow. Ib just wok ib
away and grew thinner every day. Ieted
the same thing nearly everywhere 1, eon
tin baby would wear out if it was A
and kissed continually."
Make a Note of This.
Pain banished ae lit by magi°. Poleon's
Norviline is a pobitive and almost instan-
taneous remedy ler external, Internal, or
local fpains, Tho most active remedy hitt•
erto known falls short of Nerviline for pot-
ent power in the relief of nerve pale. Good
for external or internal use. Buy a 10 Dont
sample bottle, Large bottlers 25 ciente, at
all druggists.
At the marriage of of Lady Nina Nevill
to Mr. Brasaoy, in England, thebrid(smaids
wore orioketing ebsbuines, the colors being
carnation pink green, and white. Their
banquets were of pink oarnationeand groan
orchids tied with White ribbons,
LATE f'OREIGN DESPATCHES,
himN,owa from Egypt le to the effect that
Erato1'aelta has overwhelmingly defeated
the 6,000 ilandiots that were Bentlagaioeb
1)e°patohes from Vienna state that un,
leue the students at once cease their dine
turbenoes the authorities will alas° the un-
iversity,
The Ruesinn Government has decided to
make a further ineresse in the duties upon
German goods coming into the Empire.
Couub Herbert .Bismark is stepping at
the retidenoe of Lord Rosebery, He de.
oiaroenature, his visit to England Is of a private
Germany has mended to the request
of France for permiselon to transfer the
remains of Generals Carnot and Marceau
to France.
Owing to the repent disturbances Premier
Von Tisza, of Hungary, is now guarded
by sixteen mounted polioemen when he
drlvea out.
Englund has demanded of Morocco 1;50,-
000 indemnity for the massacre and pillage
ab bbe Mackenzie faotory, at Cape Juby, In
1888,
The St. Petersburg " Grashdanin" soya
the budget Surplus in 1888 was sixty million
rubles, and that the revision of the customs
tariff has been postponed.
Ten Arab immigrants, who arrived at New
York during lamb week and were detained
by the emigration commissioner, were ehip-
pod beak to Europe on Saturday.
The American sugar refinery, of San Fran-
cisca), has raised the priue of all gradee of
sugar one-quarter of a cent per pound, and
and the California refinery one•sighth of a
Cent.
The London Standard's" Shanghai corres-
pondent says : Interviews between Li Hung
Chang and Mr. Danny have resulted in an
amicable understanding between China and
Corea,
NEWS FROM CHINA,
Threatened Massacre of Christians by
Echols—Trio famine.
SAN FRANCISCO, March 30.—The steamer
Arabia arrived last night from Chino. and
Japan. In Shantung the anti foreign excite•
meat runs high. On February 23 at Chafoo
the Europeans feared an attack from mutin-
one troops. Ib ie reported that the mutin-
eers proposed marohing against the Custom
house and other plumes. As no men•of•war
was there, intense excitement prevailed. No
attack was made, however.
A missonaryfrom Chi-Hai•Yu states that
the Chinese in that city have posted placards
outefde of various foreign residences notify
ing the tenants that they intended to mac
sac-" all Christians before long. The rebels
are: •'posed to number 2,500, Oa Pabru.
ary :.: 500 soldiers were sent to intercept
them, out could find no indications of the
enemy, who are euppoeed to have gone in.
land.
The Chinese authorities declare that the
reports of famine in Central China are ex.
aggerated. Great suffering is admitted to
exist in the Northern provinoee.
Foreign employes in Corea have not been
paid for several menthe and the work has
stopped.
The Everglades of Florida begin just south
of the lake, and are fully 100 miles long and
70 broad, over whtoh no surveyor's chain
has ever been etretehed and of which all
knowledge is as 000jeoturaI as of the inter-
ior of the Dark Continent, beyond the path
of Stanley
If you have the bronchitis, you often are hoarse,
Your throat's raw and smarting 1 you're hacking 0f
course
And if you're not oarefol, the first thing you know,
Your lungs are Attacked, and disease lays you low.
By using Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
Discovery, bronchial affections and all kind-
red complaints oan be oured, but if neglected,
they often terminate in consumption.
False hair mueb hide wbab the bald head
doth know.
A Bad Spell.
A merchant's olork wrote a cheek for
forty dollars, and spelled the numerical ad-
jective "1-o•u-r-bey." His employer direct-
ed hie attention to the error, with the re-
mark, "you seem to have a bad spell this
morning, to which the olork replied, "sure
enough ; " I've left out the 'q•h " Let us
hope the clerk will spill further amend his
orbhography, meanwhile, if any suffer from
a "bad spell" of headache, superinduced by
constipation, ask your druggist for Dr
Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets. Entire
ly vegetable, mild, prompt and effective, and
a most efficient remedy for derangements of
the liver, etomaoh and bowls.
Why should oil producers ever grumble
Thoy live on the fat of the ]and.
" The Merry Wives of Windsor"
could scarcely have played such fantastic
pranks had they been subject bo the many
ills so common among the women of to -day
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a legi•
timato medioine, carefully compounded by
an experienced and skillful physician, and
adapted to woman's delicate organization.
I6 is purely vegetable in rte oompoeition,
and ilerfeotly harmless in its effaced in any
condition of the system. It oures all those
weaknesses and ailments peouliar to women,
and ib is the only medicine for women, sold
by druggists, UNDER A POSITIVE GUARANTFE
from the manufnturere, that ib will give
sabisfaotion in every Daae, or money will be
refunded. This guarantee has been printed
on the bottle.wrapper, and faithfully carried
out for many years.
Mrs. Langtry says she never carries any
money, but sho lobe draws 1 t of it
Coif No More.
Watson's cough drops are the best in the
world for the throat and chest, for the voice ,
unequalled, Seo that the lettere R. & T. W.
aro stamped on oaoh drop.
I6 makes a difference about a man's value,
whether you take him ab his own estimation
or at that of his wife,
Consumption Surely Cured.
To the Editor :--
Please inform your readers that I have a
positive remedy for the above named disease.
By its timely neo thoueande of hopeless
oases have been permanently oured. I shall
be glad to send two bottles of my remedy
free to any of your readers who have ton.
oumption if they will send me their Ex.
press and P. 0. address. Beep'y, T. A.
Slocum, M. 0., 164 West Adelaide S6.,
Toronto.
A, P. 443.
tralstaineataaleuntestreamanaanantsunatootnantramottorattazza
PATENT8 prconrod, Patent Attorneys, and oxoeste,
Fet'd 1807. Donald C btidorrt et Co., Toronto.
cA •MER nnd1`a "OVnMTh ttnknifo,
Y aV= book Seo. Dna tl0MlggARL.
NaoyNlagaeaSe.r nuanle. N. v.
OF PURE COD LIVER OIL
AND HYPOPFIOSPHITES.
Almost as Pa" ^able as Mink.
So dislntlsed that the 'moss delicate storm:eh
eau la 7' ft, 8rtinarPrabic as a FMCS!!
J')CUA57(8.780, Persons GAIN rap-
idly white Want, t2:
SCOTT'S RMUL HtCN is acknowledged by Pity -
Malaga to lin tin, FINEST and BEnT preparation
of its alone for the relief of
CONSUMPTION, SCROFULA.
GENERAL DEBILITY,
Wasting Diseases of Children,
and CHRONIC COUGHS.
Bold by alt Druggists, GOc. and $1.00,
el 1101 RESPONSIBLE AGENTS WANTED
7f to sell th, (loath a, Fanning M111 with Desging
Attachment. Moet Reliable MITI mode In Canada,
2,600 sold h, Ontario last year, Liberal Terme. Ap-
ply to MANsON CAMPBELL, C'nesting, ON'r.:
rrIIE BOILER INSPECTION and Insult
lance Company of Canada,
Ooosulting Engineers and Solicitors of Patenee.
TORONTO.
G. 0. Rona ohiel Engineer. A. Faesoe 801'y-Ttoa01
ar' 0M.5IERCIALAND SIIOR'rriaND ED CCA...
‘,,,/ MN is a valuable R quirewent for ev0rt
yo mg man and woo= Address CANADIAN BfdNNso
Usn'xrtevr, Publt, Library llupdiog, Tor.nto. for
portion I we.
THOS. BENC /UCH, CBAS.. H. BROOKS,
Pre,idoot. Sco'y & Manager.
A (1ENTi—Sesuseue 000 080 Hone, to illumin+to
l the pathway t Ilse. 0151ng the beet thoughts
00 a1 lands In ohee-ing word., to comfort, encourage
and inspire the Intim, timber/3 tons, and daughters
of our land. EAIted0v Walter Scott Vail w th eo
Introduction by Rev. John .Han, 0,14 A volume of
75 selected Gems In P, 0.0 and Poetry, born the writ.
Inge of the ablest authors of lends, Terms liberal.
WAf, BRIGGS, Pdblisher, Toronto. T`A_
BARKER'S SHORTHAND SCHOOL,
45 Kang Street East, Toronto,
Formerly, for over ave years, Prinelpa of the Short.
hand Institute In connection with the Canadian Susi
nese University. Tyvewrlting department under the
management el Mr, 0E0. BEN00UOff, agent for the
Remington Typawrlcer. Apply for oiroular, Mention
this paper in writing,
AUTOMATIC SAFETY ELEVATORS
Pat, hydraulic, hand and steam eleratar,.
LEITCH Sc TURNBULL,
Canadian 01.yator works, Pater and Queen streets,
HAMILTON, ONT,
SEEI3SRAY INlo Wneleda'G60
kinds, GIrmE, and 100. Certificate for
'.Seeds,yy. Hoar ch,Irr, ell fur sstnn,0t�0 eg. '00003
;verseta'.' lov,m ds1Rbtad. Tr11011 your
deltas, 0.w. PAax, r4NNETT88IIn0, Pt,
Send at once. Thts notice will not appear again.
SIBS. For
Artificial ors
J, DORAN ddress In SON, r•
Toronto, On
MUSICAL IOSTRUNENTS.--Send for our
Largo IBuatratea Catalogue o! Band Intro.
moots. Viellne, Guitars, Flutes, , to., and all kind
of Trimmings. Agent for Trenohe's and DeWitt a
Plays. BUTLAND'S M0810 STORE, 87 Hing St.
West. Toronto, Onr,
lee Second -let.
k Send for Ile[.
BICYCLE
51 T. L A N E.
^► MON7IUGL, °R
GUELPII 0108531'138 COLLEGE, Guelph,
Ont.—Filth Soholaetla Year—lt grad untee are
now employed as Book-keepers, Business Managers,
Stenographers, eta, by many of the largest buetoeee
houses in Canada and the United States. young mon
and women desiring a thorough business eduoation
will consult their own welfare by attending the Guelph
Business College For terms and particulars, address
>w Mo00R31ICK, Ptinoipal.
r1fIE tfBk,,
ELITY OF UNCLE SAIL—GivesJJb every eiNzon a right to a free farm trout the
pu Ile land. You have long intended tl look this
matter up. Why not now? A great body of YARN
eoyRmiDBNT LAND has j•et been opened for sortie•
ment el, ng the St Paul, Minneapo'it it Manitoba
Railway in Montana. Itis rlah and gently toting. Pine
and bard wood timber is easily aooeeelble. Clear
streams water the country. It le the natural home of
hones, eheop and cattle. Large amps eon be raised
without irrigation. Great veins of coal are plentiful
This is what- v u want. Title is the list body of free
land in the United State. suitable for grazing and
agricultu'al purposes. For further information apply
to F. I Wettest, Gen, Paas. and Ticket Agent, Sb.
Paul, Afton, or J M. HccKmNs, 4 Palmer House Block,
Toronto,
Brown Engines
'IRON AND MEL BOILERS ANY SIZE.
TORt.VTO ENGINE WORKS,
PRINCESS A D FRONT 873.
J. Perkins & Co. - Toronto,
r7dWVa�aSawC,0.
MONEY"N
8s4ahlf-Acd,lsbt
aL 75454. f r)wye net
loxl+
attu7us,i(.lAC
7lf thereat. 50,, Toronto.
114 0,...___N EY Alit eAtraottratorTilii,
Grtf,lp i t'v1'.(,anaIay
004,81580005407,pr sb lr7.
BEATTY, CHADWICK, BiACKSTOOK & GALT,
Barristers at 1 Senr4tors,
Wellington 8a, nor. Church, (over frank. 01 roma')
TORONTO. ONT.
CHOICE FAn, MS FOR SALE iii ALL PARTS OF
M
Pardee wlebmg 10 purebec a lmproyed Mauttur
Farms, Irony 0e acres upw'arod, rylth Jmmedlat
possession, call or write to 1., 8. a. ACLb0N, `,db.
Arthur's Block, Cain et., Winnipeg. informaGan
lurnished elrete of charge, and settlers a,:s fn
making selection.
MON-333.2 TO Z0.4t1sT
AT CusnsoT BATHS or Isms!.
Merchants, Butchers,
and 7 rad urs generally,
We want a GOODMAN in your looallty to pickup
CALF SKINS
For us. Cash Furnished 011 satisfactory roman
Address,
d, S. P A Gl-11I,
I1SD0 PARK, Vermont, U, 8.
OF ALL HIND/
Dealere billed of
on lavorabletem
H.H,HURO &SOli
Nuraerymea,Bur'
!Lawton, Ont.
A Omen car 1 rad. 'Wore Foto Native Onions,
Stained Glass
FOR CHURCHES, DWELLINGS,
AND PUBLIC BUILDINGS.
M1CAUSLA & SON,
76 King St. W.. Toronto.
Allan Line Royal Flail Steamships
Saltine during winter Iron, Portland every Thuieday
and Halifax ever Saturday to Liverpool, and to sum-
mer from Quehro every Saturday to Llvorpool,caBIng
at f .dar,derry to land mane and passengers for
Scooand and balani 1 alto from Baltimore, via Hall
fax and St. Jahns, N. F., to Liverpool 'fortnightly
during summer months. The steamers o! the aloe.
row awe sail during winter to and from Halifax,
Portland, Poston and Philadelphia ;and during Brno
mar between Olacgos, and Montreal weekly • Glos.
gow and Boston weekly, and Gtaegow and Philadel-
phia fortnightly,
For freight, passage or other Information apply to
A, Srhumaobet a Co., Baltlmorr' S. Cunard R Co.,
Halifax Shea a Co., St. Jobn'o, NW., Wm, Thomp-
son it Co. St. John, N. B.; Allen G 0o., 0klegao;
Love 58 Aiden, New yolk ; H. Borulier, Toronto ;
Allan, Rae L Co., flusher, ; Wm. Breokie Philadel-
phia H. A. Allen Portiere. II ..tor. Montreal.
We are children mho cheerfitlly four in the chorus -
When Breadmaher's Yeast ie the subject before IA..
Mamma tried all the rest,
So she know it'e the best, fll�/0Jeti0
'Cause her bread is the :Widest, her bans are fir"
And me.c00 all the pancakes she dare tet beforee S.
BUY THE BREADMAKER'S YEAST. PRICE 5 CENTS.
CVRE
PTS!
when I say 000E 1 do net mean merelyto
stop them for a time, and then have them 0s.
turn again. I MEAN A RADICAL CURE
I have made the disease of
FITS, EPILEPSY or
FALLING SICKNESS
A life tong study. I WARRANT Myremedy*
conn the worst eases. Because others have
failed is no reason tor notuowreceivin acare,
Send
507ZN ALLIBLE treatise
a Give receiving
s
and Post Office. It costs you nothing for a
trial, and it will cure you. Address
H. G. ROOT, II.0„ 164 West Adelaide St,
TORONTO, ONT.
Johnston' S F1llidEeof,
It Makes a
Palatable and
Invigorating
Beverage
It amends a all the MI kitbag and
lite giving alamenhi of meat in the
meet digeetbile form.
B
0
The Great Strength -Giver
WILUIDLSEEF
THE GREAT
STRENGTH GIVER
t PERFEQT F000
Fon Tse slct<
71 WARMING o
'iUTRITIoU8(8EVERAGso
It Supplies
Concentrated
Nourishment
and itis the; most
Strength Giving
Food for the Sick.
Confeer
ti
TORONTO
°X'XX 333 3:EGC c s 1HJ 5010c0 e:/e WIC X...". I@T �Z .
ife
OVER ASSETS
9 �
AND CAPITAL.
SIR, W. P. HOWLAND, President,
iv, (1. IIACDDNAL1)4 wM. ELLIOT, N. HOOPER, J. K. DC&AAhX1i,Tl�
AorITAnr '{'mn.panstt0NRa. { MANAGING Diuegoa.
Planers, Matchers and Moulders Combined.
olliliaA. zi$T, ernoitov 5 I5Gst Goole, nimeititsiis Hh1 LT.
BlinTG LE, LATH glad 17ZDIEER
M9,f1HIRES4
POST BANDoSAW5
SA.W M I L,LS5
IDINK-'BE6TlN
PorElovating ondeonneynrg
SAWS,
GUMME ?S,
SWAGES.
0(an610vok tyete cart do.
Yay, Mralttibl'd anti Winnipeg. "
Widows. trtgina !Vohs :,ftwp