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The Huron Expositor, 1890-04-25, Page 6• y EFFECTU, �- H RESTORE �•. ..-• . n i � 1-L GU FIE 0 DISEASES -:;;INK 1.01Tri R IAL ritTlM,HUMOURSBeCf-_ EHEW THE Y o,tte -Q ForALstye� Unia `\. f e• t.1 • t• C 6 What is "Good Form." BY MRS. '1+'. K. YOWARD. eA-paragraph i a recent issue of a so - way paper de lared, that "Senator Blank poured hi tea :into his saucer to cool before dr king. No gentleman would be guilty f such an act." Such a paragr ph gives rise . to the muery, "What onstitutes the gentle- an" The me e knowledge and ob- servance of the inute . details massed tinder the title f "good form," or has the title a broa er and better signifi- oa►nee ? Where do these thousand and one details of good form originate ? We have no i11mperial court to set our fashions in arbitrary lines -to dictate to us how we shah eat our bread and but- ter -at just the angle it is, good form to carry our fork -to tell us that it Is vul- gar to handle one article of food with the fingers, but=the he,ight of gentility to use them in eating sltnething else. Some of us have too much real life to occupy our hands, head, and heart, to devote much tine to keeping up with the frivolous in' life. It is probable that the misguided sen- ator, who made such a fatal blunder in good form, was an earnest man, with the interests of his state at heart, and a busy round of duties awaiting him, and without a thought of the heinous offense be was committing against society,placed convenience betore ceremony, and subjected hims if to a newspaper para- graph. Again, did not the society ed.tor tres- pass more seriously upon the good form of kindness and real gentleinauliness in noticing the matter than his victim- did o pen the rulesf etiquette ? While not in any sense contending for undue careless liners in table manners,• still it must be confessed that there is very much that is finical and unneces- sary quoted as "good form," and .a per son should be allowed the exercise of his own taste and good sense in observing them, without incurring the verdict "no lady" or "no gentleman," if one chances to violate one of these multitudinous rules of propriety. One of the most perfect gentlemen I ever met, a mart who made an elyeian home for his wife and children through his exceeding kieduess and thoughttul- ness, whose guests went away charmed by his delicate attentions and the broad culture of his mind and heart, this gen- tlemau in the best and truest sense of the word, had most shocking table man- ners, and I doubt not would have culled his tea in his saucer without aprick of conscience, had it been c:Jeivenieut Or necessary to do t}o. We are return`-iig to the old fashions by degrees, and return to the old fash- ioned method of erving meals might be a refreshing cha gni from the fussiness of present styles. `When grandmother set her table with the steaming roast, thepileof suuwy po- tatoes and other vegetables,the delicious cream biscuit, the berry pie or shor t cake, and the coffee pot sending out its appetizing odors, dinners tasted infinite- ly better than now, when dapper Jane audMaria hover over us with a crumb brush and tray, and keep us `waiting su long between courses that one misses half the enjoylnent of the meal in the tediousness of serving it. It is a happy feature of the age that our girls are coming to a higher stand- ard of thought and feeling than ever be- fore. Life is becoming more and more of a real and earnest existence to them, and girla in -our colleges, girls in the higher gradesof. industrial work, and girls even iu the professions which have so long been closed against them, proclaim the fact that the days of feminine use- lessness are oveP and that a woman may cultivate every faculty of her heart and head, and utilize the same with her )sands, without sacrificing in the least her title to ladyship. • In the Ladies' Parlor. No one who is obliged to wait in the ladies'parlor of one of our large stores Need be at a loss for. amusement. To. any person with an observant pair of ayes, entertainment is provided free. There is no better place in which to see and enjoy different types of feminine n ature. There is the old lady from the country up for a day's shopping. She is arrayed in rusty black, with a big plaid shawl, and carries a brown carpet -bag, with a green parrot swinging in a yellow ring Worked upon it. When she opens her_bag and innocent- ly begins to munch her doughnut -seat- ed as she.is immediately beneath the no- tice "Luncheons Rust Not be Eaten Here "-even the woman in charge of the place, noting how carefully she col- lects every crumb in the paper on her knee, has not the heart to disturb leer. - As she rises to go, the two gay young girls who have been chattering in a cornea while one of them coaxed a pair of new gloves upon her plump hands, rise also. The old lady speaks to them ; and they are heard to say in reply : Oh yes ; they are' going the same way, and they will put her into the right car with pleaaure. One of them takes her bag ; the new- ly -gloved fingersof the other daintily lift the paper containing the remains of the doughnut and turnover ; she flits across the room and tosses it into the fire, then runs laughing to catch up with the others. The three pass out together, the little drama ends, and the observer looks about to find some other persons worthy of his attention. There is the rosy young lady with the music roll, warming her numb hands at the fire, and keeping one eye on the clock to see if she must start yet for her class -a country girl, evidently, come thirty or forty miles in this bleak wea- ther to take her lesson in the city.:, There is the pale woman with a head- ache, her eyes closed, lying back -with her head against' a rolled -up shawl ; and the pleasant matron who goes to her with a vinaigrette and a glass of water. There is the distracted woman who has lost something, and keeps emptying her shopping -bag into her lap, opening and counting all the parcels ; putting them back ; sitting still a few ,minutes with an ex'pressionf'of dismal resignation and then, apparently thinking that after all perhaps she has overlooked it, re- peating the same process from the.beein- *big. There ie the near-sighted girl holding a Greek grammar close to her face and muttering conjugations. All All these are interesting, but the ob- server is more attracted toward two young women in the dimmest and remot- est nook of the roam, who are Isughing a good deal while one of tiein tries to place herself so as to conceal what the other is doing. • For some time this remains a mystery, but, presently, stepping across the two valises at their feet, the young women: i come forward, and one of them s seen to be bareheaded. She goes to the glass, and there tries on a very pretty little bonnet, evidently just trimmed, and turns to her compan- ion for inspection. It is approved, and they return to their seat, with whisper- ing and more laughter, and appear to be making up a -bundle there. The observer makes a shrewd guess at what itis ; he thinks they' are from out of town, and are starting on a journey and that she needed a new travelling" bonnet, and had no time to get it before. There 1 they ore going ; they are gone. A parcel lies on the seat they had oc- cupied-. The woman in charge Domes up ; smiles ; smiles more broadly., opens and • displays it. Sure enough, it is the shabby, old, discarded hat, labelled in large, pencilled letters, on a conspicuous tag` -For the Worthy Poor, !"' How the Chinaman Has Paid His Debt to the Caucasian. Nearly half a century ago the Chinese were induced, by use of the cannon argument and the slaughter of uncount- ed thousands of their brethren to permit the importation of opium from the East Indies. In thus "opening a market for trade," civilization forced a terrible vice upon a vast people and reaped an appar- ent profit in hard cash from the bloody transaction. But the outcome of the business dem- onstrates that the profit was far more apparent than real. A baffled Oriental does not limit his dreams of vengeance by the boundaries of a 'lifetime. He makes his hatred 'hereditary. and be- queaths to his eon the accomplishment of the plans he has been unable to carry out. Sooner or later patient, persistent, unrelenting hate will carve some way to itsappointed goal and stand grinning in ghastly glee above the corpse of the victim. A civilized nation compelled China to use opium. China in return has pre- sented the whole world with a pipe for use in smoking the drug, and introduced an almost incurable vice among the Cau- casian race. Eder Majesty's Indian Em- pire no longer grows the poppylor Mon- gelian consumption alone, for slaves of the narcotic exist everywhere at the present day. Not long since a gentleman wio has spent several years as a merch nt at Canton said i " Abstractly China does not care for the emigration of her citi- zens. They are allowed to go abroad for the purpose of bettering their condi- tion, but I think I ain in a position to state it as a_ fact that when they depart they are given to understand that one of their duties is to spread the habit of opium smoking. To my mind they are made the agents of a fiendish Oriental rhv-enge for past injustice and injury." At any rate, it is from the Chinese that the habit is acquired, and it is by them that the implements for self de- struction are furnished. These latter are cheap or costly, according to the means of the purchaser, and consist of a pipe, a bowl, a lamp, a tray, a bottle of oil, a yin hoc or bodkin. and a toy or box for holding the prepared opium. The pipe is of bamboo, and is tipped at either end with bone, ivory, silver, gold or mother of pearl. The lowest price of a new pipe is $1.25, but the same stem when thoroughly seasoned with opium is valued at $25. Near one end, mounted about with brass, is the aperture into which the bowl is inserted. p The bowls are of three grades. Those of red china clay cost eight cents each ; the second grade, of dark gray) or slate color, are valued at thirty-five cents,and the high- est quality, the black, brings fifty cents. The lamp can be purchased for sixty cents ; but irit is caged with East In- dian silver filagree work .it may be held at as high a sum as $100. • The tray is simply an ordinary tea tray for holding the various utensils. The oil used is either olive or peanut, and the yin hoc is a bodkin of steel pointed at one end and flattened at the other. The toy is an air -tight box, in which the supply of prepared] opium is kept. It may be of bone, worth only forty cents; or of solid gold or silver and diamond studded. The opium is of four grades, and is sold in packages of five taels. The cheapest variety' is worth $7;50 a can, and the costliest $11.50. These are thematerials, and here is the manner fn which the keeper of an opium "joint utilizes them in serving his customers : First he cleans out the bowl sad dampens the top with a sponge./ Then he takes the top cover from the toy, dips in the ahaa1p end of the bodkin and bring out a bit of pasty opium the size of a pea. He holds this half an inch from the Earner of the lamp until it swells to the_ dimensions of a small walnut, and the original color changes from that of black molasses to a Vandyke brown. The sizzling globule isnext Ivithdrawn from the fire, carefully rolled about on the bowl of the pipe and agai subject- ed to the flame. After a Chir and final, cooking it is deftly deposited in the cen- ter of the bowl. One z long whiff of twenty second's duration and the pill is gone. The processe of cook-ing occupies about two minutes. Five 1 pills will make an amatenr drowsy, and eight will put him to sleep, but a `fiend's" daily ration is forty pills and upwards. So many difficulties and dangers hedge about the acquirement of the habit that it seems wonderful that any one persists in smoking the deadly drug after the first experiment. If even the slightest breath of air enters the mouth when the smoke is inhaled the devotee is certain to suffer from an acute attack of wind colic, for which the only specific is a slice of lemon covered with burnt opium. A curious thing about the prepared drug is that it hardens if exposed to the air, but the atmospheric effect on a cooked pill is to soften it to its original semi -liquidity. Opium smoking is -no longer 'confined to the back rooms of Chinese laundries. It has gone beyond that now, and finds its home and its white patrons in more luxurious quarters. Probably no large city in the United States is without at least two or three laviahly appointed re sorts where the unhappy victims of the vice meet to indulge in their suipidal propensities. They are .arranged in a series of apartments abounding in rugs and Douches, and it is the custom of the regular patrons to group themselves in THE HURON EXPOSITOR, parties of four, generally two men and two women, who recline about the'little flickering lamp and pass the deadly pipe !from hand to hand, the most expert of the quartet attending to the cooking of, the pills. In New York city several "joints" lie within a stone's throw of Sixth avenue and Twenty-eighth street. Near this corner is a fruit store which is open day and night. The clerk on duty after -dark is an expert mandolin player, and the plane is a favorite resort for the sated " fiends," who sit hour after hour dreamily listening to sweet strains of music and indulging in reveries born of poisoned blood , and semi -paralyzed brains. As they muse and ponder the hours slip away and the dawn comes on apace. The mandolin tinkles out the " Sweet By and By" and the pale -faced relics of lost manhood and womanhood glide out to seek fresh distraction or the merclful oblivion of sleep. These are the " Yenshee quas," the "opium devils," to whom the Chinaman points derisively as they totter by his laundry door. -FRED C. DAYTON. =Tom and Fred Jones, aged 17 and .19, sons of Judge T. S. Jones, of Ne- braska city, have been arrested for num- erous burglaries and safe -cracking . jobs. They have confessed. Seaforth Roller Mills, Gristing, Chopping and Ex- change promptly attended to and best of satisfaction guaranteed. - Cash for any quantity of good Wheat and Barley. Feed of all kinds for sale, Arrange- ments are made for regular arrivals of Manitoba wheat and very best of flour can be obtained. Business conducted on cash terms. Yours Truly, W. H. CODE & CO.. 1IS9tf _SEAFORTH Musical Instrument Scott -Brothers, PROPRIETORS, SEAFORTH, - ONT. PIANOS. -Dunham, New York ; W. Bell & Co., Guelph ; Dominion Piano Company, Bowmanville. ORGANS. - W. Bell & Co., Guelph ; Dominion Organ Company, Bowmanville ; . D. W. Karn & Co„ Woodstock. ti The above instruments always on hand, also a few good second-hand Pianos and Organs for sale at from $25 upwards. Instruments sold on the instalment plan, or on terms to suit cuss tomers. Violins, Concertinas and small instru- ments on hand ; also sheet music, books, &c. SCOTT BROS. THE BIG MILLS, SEAFt RTH. The above Ills havenow been thoroughly y built upon the complete HUNGARIAN ROLLER PROCESS. Th. Mill and Storehouse Buildings have been greatly enlarged, and sew machinery applied throughout. - THE LATEST IMPROVED ROLLS AND--- Flour Dressing Machines From the best Manufacturing Firms have been put in, and everything necessary added to enable her to turn out floor SECOND TO NONE In the Dominion. The faoillt.es for receiving grain from farmers and for elevating and shipping have also deep extensively improved. Grain can now lr taken from farmers' wagons, weighed; and loaded into oars at the rate of 700 bushels per hour, by the work of two men. A LARGE FEED STONE -FOR--- CUSTOM CHOPPING Has been put in, and the necessary machinery for handling ohop and coarse grains. A good shed has been erected, so that wagens can be unloaded and reloaded under cover. WHEAT EAT EXCHANGES Promptly attended to, and • FIRST-CLASS ROLLER FLOUR GUARANTEED. CITsTOM - EJ:EZ7 Chopped satisfactorily and without delay. ROLLER FLOUR, BRAN, SHORTS, And all kinds of CHOPPED FEED "- Constantly on hand. Highest Market Price Paid in Cash for any Quantity of Wheat. APPLE BARR-ELS -AND- EINE, COARSE AND LAND SALT FOR SALE. Only first-class and obliging men will be kept attend oustcmers. The liberal patronge of farmers and general trade respectfully solicited. A. W. OGILVIE & CO., PRO PRIETORS APRIL 25, 1890, A STRAIGHT TIP. Everybody who smokes likes a good Cigar, and sometimds, in order to procure a good Cigar, you have to pay a fancy price. Now, we have a line which we sell for Five Cents, and. as good a Cigar as the majority of ten cent goods, and our Ten Cent Cigars are simply elegant -guaranteed to be real Havana -and only pro- curable at the Corner Drug Store, Seaforth. R. DOWN, Manager. . rcP Remember the place -J. Logan's Old Stand. Wellington, GOING NORTH-. Ethel.. ....... Brussels.. - Bluevale Wingham.. .. Gens Sou'rs- Wingham ..... . Bluevale. •. Brussels Ethel.... _.. , .. Grey and Bruce.: TOrrEuPassenger, Mixed. 2.51 r. Y. 9.81 P. 8.38 r. l[. 8.06 0.46 9.20 8.21 10.00 9.60 8.80 10,10 11.10 Passenger Mixed. 6.39 L.m.11.10 A. M. 7.26 r. x 6.48 11.22 7.65 7.02 11.46 8.65 7.14 12.00 9.81 • London, Huron and Bryce. GOING NORTH - London depart Exeter Hensall.. , - Kippen , . ..... , Bruoefleld Clinton Londesboro Blyth.,-.....,,, Belgrave Wingham arrive Goma SOUTn- Wingham, depart Belgrave Blyth Londesboro .... Clinton rs� Bruoefield Kippen., Hensall Exeter ,4-••• _Passenger. 7.55r.u. 4.85 sem 9.16 5.67 9.28 6.09 9.34 6.17 9.42 8.26 -. .,0.00 8.4 10.19 7.03 •..., 10.28 7.12 ' _.10.42 7.27 11.00 7.45 Passenger 6.50A,x 7.05 4.00 7.18 4.16 7.26 4.25 7.55 4.45 8.15 6.04 8.24 6.12 8.32 5.19 8.50 5.33 Grand Tank Railway. rains leave Seaforth end Clinton station fo owe: Gl urn WENT- SEAFORTH. assenger , . - . • .. 1.03 P. Pestienger... , , .. 9.10 P. x. Mixed Train.......- 9,20 A. n. Mixed Train........ 6115 P. M. GOING EASE -- Passenger.. , . , .... 711.59 A. M. Passenger . , , . , . .. 2.43 P. M. Mixed Train........ 5.30 P tt. Freight Train.. .... 4.30 P. M. Marron 1.20 P. M 9.27e. ie 10.05 A.m. 8.40 7.43 A. 2.25 P. 4.56 P. M 3.30 P. LUMSDEN & WILSO\'S FOR WALL PAPERS AND OILING DECORATIONS. We naive bought a large stock of new Wall Papers at a great sacrifice, and with this addition to our already large purchases for th e Spring tract; our assortment is, we believe, the largest ever shown in the County, and the public may rely on getting the benefit of our bar- gain, as we tare bound to make them go quick if low prices and the best goods will do it. ' WINDOW SHADES. We hate purchased a large number of new patterns in Decorated Linen Window Shades, and can guarantee the best goods and lowest prices in thin line. Call and sPe the new styles at LMSDEN 8c WILSON'S, COTT'S BLOCK, MAIN STREET, SEAFORTH. N. B. We have made arrangements with the best manufacturers of Children" Carriages to sell these goods from Catalogue only, as we have no room to keep them in stock. We will sell at closer prices, and goods will always be fresh and in perfect order. Call and see the styles. ENJOY GOOD HEALTH. CASE's SARSAPARILLA BITTERS Cures very kind of Unhealthy Humor and Disease Caused. from Impurity of the Blood. This va pies, Erupti Sick Stomac Loss of A Debility. 11 t is -a the peculiar tion and Ch PURIFY uable compound co pound cures Kidney and Liver Complaints, Pim- ns of the Skin, Boils, Constipation, Biliousness, Dyspepsia, Loss of Sleep, Neuralgia, Pains in the Bones and Back, petite, Langour, Female Weakness, the, General YOUR gentle 'regulating purgative, as well as a tonic, possessing era of acting as a powerful agent in relieving Conges- onic Inflammation of the Liver and all. the visceral organs. ie BLOOD This va uable preparation excites the whole system to a new and vigorous action, giving tone and strength to the system debilitated by disease, and affords a great protection from attacks that originate in changes of the season, of climate, and of life. The best Spring Medi- cine sold. ull directions with each bottle. Price, 50c and $1.00. Refuse all s bstituttes. Prepared by H. Sp neer Case, Hamilton, Ontario. Sod by J. S. Roberts, Seaforth. ate Most Successful Remedy ever discs Bred, as it is certain in its effects and does not blister. Read proof below. (MALL'S SPAVIN CURE OFFICE OF Cements A. SNYDER, Bamenn on' CI.XvELelw BAY AND TROTTING BRED HORSE$ ELM WOOD, ILL, Nov 20, 1888. a. B. 3. KENDALL CO. Dear Sirs : I have always purchased your Kel a1Ya Spavin Cure by the half dozen bottles, could fe prices in larger quantity. I think it! ne of the beat liniments► on earth. X have usedl a my stables for three years. - Yours truly, CHAS. A. SNYDER. CENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE BROOKLYN, N. Y., November 3, 1888. B. J KENDALL Co. Dear Sirs : I desire to give you testimonial of m pod opinion of your Eendall's Spavin Cure. I hal sed it for Lameness. Stiff Joints e' i av-ins, and I have found it a sure Dura, I cora Uy recommend it to all horsemen. Yours truly A. E. Gu.mi r, kkauager Troy Laundry Stable! CENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE SANT, WINTON COUNTY, Osao, Dec. 19, 1888. in. 13. J. KENDALL CO. Gents : I feel it my duty to say what I have doe rith. your Kendall'g Spavin Care. I have curs wenty-five horses that had SiTh.VIIIN, ten Lina Bone, nine afflicted vrith Big Head an even of Bia Jaw. Since I have had one of yo, ooks and followed the directions, I have neve est es case of any mind. Yours truly, ANDREW THEME,ctce Horse KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE Price $1per bottle, or six bottles for $5. All Drug este have it or can get it for you, or it will be set 3 any address on receipt of price by the propri )rs. D. B. Y. KZNDw r 1. Co., Enosburgh Falls, t COLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS The Great English Prescription Cures Weakness, Spermatorrhe Emissions, Impotency and all diseases caused by self-abuse or indiscretion. One package '$1, ofjojt,Gsix $5, by mail. Write for - pamphlet. EUREKA CHEMICAL Co., Detroit, Mich. For sale by LUMSDEN & WILSON, Chemists & Druggists, Seaforth, Ont. SOUTH-WESTERN MINNESOTA Offers to settlers many advantages and no disadvantages over other places in the West. Magnificent Tillage Land Similar to that about Seaforth still to be had at reasonable prices and easy payments. For particulars write or call on NEIL CURRIE, Currie, Minn. 1157-12 THE HAY TOWNSHJP Farmers' Mutual Fire Insurance Company. A purely Farmers' Company. Live Stock also insured- when in the fields or on the road in charge of owner or servant. Also manufacturer of the Improved Surprise Washer AND WRINGER MACHINES. Agen for TOMBSTONES and the WATSON COMPANY'S TIVIPL NTS_ DNDERTAKING promptly attended to a• moderate rates. G. HOLTZMAN, Zurich, 1119 PENNYROYAL WAFERS used moafbly b over 10,000 ladles- are safe, p Basan sure in effect; a lag's greatest frien at home or abroad; 14 per box by mail or from druggist- Sealed particulars; 2e stamp.Address EUREKA CK3tie,i. Cd,., DETROIT, iflicn.I Sold by LUMSDEN & WILSON, Chemists ani Druggists, Seaforth. Ont.• 112I a2 --OF=- HEALTH OU'R,Es Kidney Trouble 1157-52-11t. 4 Halsted & Scute, Josephine street, Wingham, out J. A. HALSTED, Mount Forest. J. W. SCOTT, aistowel. Deposits received. and Inter -eat 41.,lowed. money advanced to Farmers and But. nese Men, On long or short time, on endorsed notes Of collateral security. Sale notes bought at stair Valuation. Money remitted to all parte of Canada at reasonable charges. Cjaecial Attention given to collecting Notes and Accounts. Agents in Canada -The Merchants Bank of Canada. Office hours -From 9 /1.-111. to 5 pr m. A. E. SMITH, Agent, 1154-52 0 r 0 NOSNHOI' 3 Z m m HidOJV3S v • 0 0 tet - O n {Yv cae tza lam'' tra Oaa 0 0 0 O Cfq at0 m rn •411 11 0 zD m eet m td 0atO 0 r rn et- O 0 aa 0 TIT saA®J1S 0' 0 Sae 0 0 O w 0 0 CA 1:4 Li4 chi 92 THE FARMERS' Banking House,, sE_A.FaRTH_ (In connection with the Bank of MontreseL) LOGAN & 00., BANKERS AND FINANCIAL AGENTB. Now in heir own premises on Market Street Seaforth, opposite A. Strong's office. General Banking Business done, drsfts-ialled' and cashed. Interest allowed on deposits. MONEY ` TO LEND On good notes or mortgages. JOHN WEIR. WM. LOGAN. 1058 Alvan, White Star and Inmag United States & Royal Mail Atlantic Steamships. Cabins, $50 to $100 ; Return, $100 to VO Intermediate, $30, return $80. Steerage,4wo return $40. All classes of passage to frt v all points in Great Britiain to any point l Canada- If you are sending for your fnended . not fail to secure one of 'our prepaid tint* clear through and avoid all trouble. Canadian Pacific Railway and Steamehip Tickets .to ail points. Special rates to M.aitabl and Pacific Coast points. Through $Ise! secured free. Best connection to all the United States, Australia and Chins. agency for the best stock and mutual • companies. Money loaned on :all security at lowest rates of interest. No togive information. Real estate and I Office -MARKET ST. Ticket, Steamboat, Telegraph Office. -MAIN 9'i. A. STRONP, " The" Agent, 1109 aEAFOUlle BIL -T,he 144311 soci:`ti11:114 °,ner � deanef m ry ile Alli steers buil �?va,:nis. nce cat n Sandi ,cl�e;3 . �' vusechurch of Utligaity.,� 3Ir•JacitiZela ofWcSeas formGreatW este] hand- TrunkMr. Just e81'evade d towship of l b a nar;•o ar a oow. just. ed, and the a afire made a :1 Air.. ,gefferlia, animal;s atte doing had. a gored, - One buttoning of through it to on, acid had iit is reasons) Oaf fernan W pleasant gs loses bad the band$ last W spaired of pa' terest anoth as well, ..- During struck John Barran soul both bis eyes still alive. -Near Co 12th lust, a 1 Wd a yours€ Ire an adloin berme Infer broke down the bags, kill ing 7liany me -A antsy bluc.pari rr o ington, Satin the formal p Joseph Frani services in tl titan of life si tai coat of tl WaS over,' The Sall don, Englaw moveulent is changes, and putting the waste fends,' proval of the port. The il the Salvation Oovernnleait, production . ca eying out; --Aristide breeder of h Erdenheilri, Chestnut Ili; deiphia, age; the ra=iser of celebrities of a eecluded li The ran Lcxd R.osebt the grand ol+ age cif his eh --The We erected in. L tower by -331 stead of foul tl{�U, Accordi British Udell more IR.-olria found in Re whole of Pal meal than iv men than ca more Welsh' --The ma And Miss Je on Tuesday; Maryland, feature. TI ea the ceren the bride be have marries ing asked w been sfilo had :acted err and best he ma she aid not °tiler, in a f When the ii eel at prof unablthe to r which ruche h created friends of ti are now in 1 '--Four C Mun Lo trying to ge 11 Windsor ee, an through at I ing by cone of train. a sent balk. 'in:aha�k t' who ^oritra river for 8 proeur-ed a ro'ived tv L' them fell n was resew who r&sw thein, -and e again. At 'Canadian e a time i4 Be °fl earth fd thy were. enter Oana cnlitcinla ter --in a ci nadian L making cif A1ini¢ E. _C. Edward cci looked by "�s .soon a: takes frgm Placed ::Z1 t_ 20 per cent I to t. cream to ri marks : «i is .atz advoci though 2p F water to ad the ereaain Practice to The131 ate have rel will grautix Pablie Scat( Orlgil Bewa