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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1905-11-24, Page 10THE HURON EXPOSITOR Wt�cradm Blooms ehmording to Mother Goo tte and all the Fairy books, Brooms have always been associated with twitchcrafte The explanation of it is found in BOECKH BROOMS for they easn like magic, and until they axe entirely worn out, like the proverbial new broom, "Sweep Clean." tel FatterieS Limited, FAMOUS SCOTS NOVELIST. Dr. George Macdonald and His Works —Lacked First Place in Popularity Out Were Those of Genius, The deeth of George Macdonald, one of the most famous Scotsracin of the nineteenth century, for his work ceased long before the present cen- tury opened, has recently been told in the news ealumns. He was novelist, preacher and poet, but it is as novel- ist that he is known chiefly to the -world, and his books, though they lacked the popularity aud perhaps some elements of the strength of the so -caned Kailyard school, were yet in-, dubitable works of genius. He wrote also the most charming verse in "braid Scots," and his sermons beIeng to the genuine literature of the pulpit; He Wa$ an Aberdeenshire man, de- scended from the Macdonalds of Glen- coe. He • became a Congregational minister and wrote and preached for over forty years, his first book "With - and Without," appearing in 1856. His literary talent is inherited, In part at least, by his son Ronald, favorably- kruntat as a novelist and playwright - -while another son is a distinguished London physician. It does not seem possible that near- Iy a quarter of -a century has passed since the present writer, writes a cor- respondent, seated In , a stiff-baeked pew near an open window through which showed a Sunday morning which to Macdonald would have been God made mantfest, heard the last of Many warnings he was to hear against the man and all his works. He can see to -day the expression on the faze of the pastor and the gingerly man- ner in which he handled the book from which in awe-stricken tone, he read that inscription frota the tombstone of David Eiginbreds ancestor: Here lie I, Martin Elginbrodde. Have mercy o' my soul Lord God, As I wad, were I laird God And Ye were Martin Elginbrodde. 0 - It is impossible to consider any of the works of Alacdcnald without tteigbing the purpose of them, in which over and over again, is so plain- ly expreared thc desire to bring men to a fail appreciation of the fatherhood of Cod; to eause tin in to surrender themselves to the peace, passing all understanding. Here, he proclaimed, was the road to the truest happiness that man could pursue. To -day, as one glances over the boohe anew, the con- s:rectien appears often to be faulty, th' ction to lag. Young- ladies do not nowedays sit down OR sofas beside youug 'geetlemen aud ask for proofs of the existence of the Deity, Moreover, one canuot fail to be struek by the fact that the the moment et the delivery of his message, Mac- cleeeid rises to his full stature as an art:et. Teee, for instance, that per - tion of "Robert. Falconer" which de- sctibts the finding by Robert of Jes- • t-'7tte--4,..tte N .1 1/B. MA,CDONALD. sb Hewsoa, who had been led astray. ilie hero has climbed a narrow stone stet' way to a poor, barely -furnished rotim: In the bed lay a tiny: baby, fast asleep. Robert approacheil to look at the child, for his heart felt very warm to poor Jo -ode. "A bonny bairn," he said. 'isn't he, sir? Think e'irn comin' to me! Nobody can tell the mercy o' Fowk thing it's a punishment, aim' eh me, it's a merciful one." Robert wondered at her words. Hugh Sutherland, in "David Elgin- brod," speaks of 'David as one who "cared for nothing but God; or, rather, he eared for everything, because it be- longed to God." So also was it with. Macdonald. A smiling landscape, a docile dog, all and everything the God' of love and compassion. Science, which had disturbed other lovers of the Bible, did not disturb him, because it could not destroy the promises which alone he preached. So science might prove nature in some of her moods to be fierce and relentless; it mattered not to one who saw only with the vision of faith, reinforced by the vision of the poet of the beautiful and the beneficent. The °Id battle of faith and reason fought on a new bat- tlefield. Even to the children he taught the doctrine of faith triuMphant, and "Airs wen—God'a in His heaven." When the horth wind has proven to little Diamond that people are mis- taken who think that beceuse of her they are cold, she takes him for another trip behind her, and, seeing through a window a woman, sorrowing, she causes him to whisper in the ear et the mourner: Sure is the summer, Sure is the sun; $ The night and the winter . Are shadetws that run. To -day, when perhapi the messege which lidaedouald had to deliver is needed more than ever; when self -sur- render is reckoned as weakness, even by many popular preachers, and peace ds incompatible with the strenuOus life and the ertiOnnent of the eociete of 1 men "who do•thhigs," itls pleasant to relleet that, in his own ease, at least, he proved the satisfaction Of a life nobly spent. Living to 'the age of. eighty-one year, he was honored by his university, and rewarded by his countrY with a pension for his ser- vices to literattire. Much of his later life was ,spent in Italy where nature smiled upon him as he Would have her smile, and his occasional visits to England were periods of rejoicing Over the suceese of his eldest son, Greville, a distinguishedphysician, and one of the leading authorities in Great Britain on diseases of the'nose taid throat. LORD GLAMIS. Heir to Earldom of Strathmore, Int- - etiated in House's Mysteity. Lord Glamfs, the heir to ttee Earl- dom of Strathmore, whose coming of age has just been celebrated, is a Lieutenant in the Sots Guards. He has been -duly laitlated into the mys- tery, whatever it May be,' of the hid - LORD OLLMIS. den room of Glamis Castle. The sec- ret of this room Is known only to the Earl of Strathmore, the beir-apparent, and tile factor of the estate. Glamis Castle, Forfarshire, the stately home of the Strathmores, has many legends connected with ° it. The older portion of the cas- tle dates back r900 yeara. It has continually been added to, and in 1880 was the scene of a. disastrous fire which necessitated much rebuilding. It was to Glamis that Malcolm It was brought to die after a treacherous as- sault bte,Kenneth. His ghost ,is said to haunt the castle. Another ghost that Glamis reputedly possesses .is that of the widow of the fifth tord burnt as a witch at -Edinburgh in 1537. The fam- ous secret chamber is said by some persons to date back no further than 1685, when it was designed* by the GLAMIS CASTLD, FORFAIISHIRE. then Earl as a -strong room for the family archives. Legend, however, has It that it holds, a monstrous creature, half -toad -half-Man, endowed with int,' Mortality by the Devil, who carried off Earl Beardie after a Sabbath card party, and left this dreadful being, in Lis Mace. History ,discounts this by proving that Earl Beardie died a na- tural death in 1454, and was duly buried at Dundee. POLICEMEN PARENTS. LOVe Is the Greateat . Educator tot Youth, Indeed the Principal Factor That Will Develop a Child. A great many parents use the police method of government with their chil- dren., writes Orison Swett Marden, in Success. Force is the only method of governing they know. They have nev- er learned to lead. They only know how to drive. i In many a home the father is 'look- ed upon more as a stern policemen, a severe judge, or a hard taskmaster, than as a fond, parent. The children feel a sen.se of 'relief when he leaves homean the mor ing and have a dread of his return. Irlstead of waiting for Ms homecoming' as a playfellow who will enter into their sports, romp and Play with them, sympathize with them in their little troubles and ambitions, take an interest in their -lays and every- thing that interests them, they shrink from him. They fear him. His pres- ence throws a gloomy shadow upon them. When they see him coming they hush their laughter and stop their romping play and merry games. - Children who are continually re- pressed in this unnatural way are usually timid and full of fear. They lose the sweet, open confidence and trustfulness which constitute the greatest charm of childhood. They be- come hard, sold, secretive and sus- `piefous. The joy and gladness an spontaneity vebich are as natural to the young as beauty and perfume to the flowers are cr _ushed out of them _ ___....................... No Sleep For The Kidneys. Qld people are esPecisilty liable to Kidney and Bladderdatita- tion. The organs are weakened by age. This gales up intim- motion blood is not propeely purified as it -goes to the kidneys—amd the bladder is unable to retain' the urthe vroorTly. There is a mordant aestre to urinate dray apdnifibt. —and soun4. restful sleep in unknown. THE GENTLE KIDNEY et/RE gift the vigor and of youth to kidneya sud der. It eoothee and heals the' irritated sue:faces—to' nesupthe coyote—enables them to do their work easily and naturally —and eaves tall kidney troubles.. tures "rekeettmattistest 1r °see THE CLAFLJT ci1iCAL CO.. Lfel1TEDr WiiitugoR Or. HEW YaRE., . * 66 to that the deepest known water in oi 011, the in iib Atlantic etyalluae,8t18nafantthosn.asi,soultjt d 11 L with an, ordinary lead of great weight. •••••••••••••••••••• • —That's wliat apronainent I druggifast said of Scott's ‘Emulsion • a s hort time -ago. As a rule we don't use\ or ref-er to testimonials in addressing the public, but the above reniark and sim.i1ar expression.s are made so often in connec- tion with Scott's -Emulsion that tliey are worthy of occasional no t e. From infancy to old age Scott's Emulsion offers a reliable means of remedying im- proper and weak develop- ment, restoring lost flesh and vitality, and repairing waste. The action of Scott's Emulsion is no more of a secret than the composition of the Emul- sion itself. What it does it does 'through nourish- ment—the kind of nourish, menthat cannot be ob tainecl. in ordinary 'food. No syster4 is too weak or. delicate to retain Scott's Emulsion and gather good' from it. We will rend you a sample free. Be rure thst theteictitre in th4 form of a Libel is on the svrappes ete.ry bottle et linitilsion Tot • buy; - SCOTT & BOWNE Cleemaste r9:Oilt0, Onto - 50c:iarsif•hilthiteetele $1a4.311, lepressive measurhs. 'They - become lilie fruit grown in the shade —pungeut, bitter, unlovely in every way. , Love is the great educator, the great unfolder of youth. As the sun is the only thing that will bring out the sweet juices and develop the luscious flavor,* the exquisite beauty and tint of fruits and flowers, so love is the only thing that will develop the sweet- ness and beauty of the child. It is the only power that will call out the true, the natural, the responsive, the spon- taneous, the beautiful side of itsena- ture. It is only the hard, coarse and unlovely qualities that are developed by force and repressien. PIPES AND PIPERS. Orinin and Popularity of Scotland's National Instrument. There is no music so sweet to thb ear of a Scotchman as that of the bag- pipe, and the meeting of pipers at Oban, Scotland, recently was a great occasion. It was presided over by the Duke of Argyll, and one of the most conspicuous figures was Champion Pi- per J. McColl, whO,ra.e shown in the accompanying picture, wore numerous' medals awarded him in the Many pipe playing- contests in which he has been victorious. The bagpipe is an instru- CITAMPION FIF1 8. WCOLL. ment which dates back into remote an- tiquity, but there are °various forms of it, and that in use" in the highlands of Scotland has become so identified with the Scotch .as to be ceneidered a nae tienal instrumeat, The highland pipe is quire different from the Irish varie- ty. It is very powerful and calls for ereat exertion of the lungs in forcing the air into the bag. It is supposed that the bagpipe was introduced in -to Scotland by the Norse- men. was common in England from Anglo-Saxon times and is familiarly re- ferred to by Chaucer and Shakespeare. Representations of a similar instru- ment are found in Greek sculpture. Ocean 31,614 Feet Deep. The Alnerican hydrographic office has just issued a general chart show- ing the result of deep sea soundings taken by the United States navy in affercut parts of the world in the couese,of the last ten yease. The great- est known depth of the sea is in the mid -Pacific ocedn and, is .recorded at 6,269 fathoms -31,614 feet --or sixty- six feet short cif six statute miles. This sounding was obtained on the United States steamer Nero last year, and it is greater than any elevation on the continent or, so far as 'knoarn, in the world. ' • _Lost year the greatest depth in the A.diantie was found by the United Sthtes steamer Dolphin — 4,662 fa- thoms, or five and a quarter miles. The locality is some '300 miles north- west o the Azores Wands. Previous' The Judin ;Library. - One of the largest libraries in Rus- sia is private property, belonging to the scholarly Genadi Wassilyewitch Judrn. it consists of over 100,000 volumes, and the oddest thing about it is that , it is not situated in a large city, bat In the neighborhood of one of the moet inaccessible Siberlae towns, Kanejo narsk. It was at first in that town, but after the fire of 1881, whicli,-destrayed a great part of it, the owner got alarm-. ed and removed it to the eeuntrye ' TO BESECRET FOR YEAR BEHRING'S CURE FOR CONSUMP- TION AND WHY HE SO DESIRES. Hope Expressed That "White Plague" May Be Stamped Out in Civilized Countries—Prof. Von Behring the Discoverer of., Diphtheria Anti- ' Toxin, and Spenth$40,000, Amo4t of Nobel Piize, int Experiments. "If the present lmOwledge; concern- ing the means of preventing; tubercul- osis were generally applied, it is nee to say that tuberculosis would be , s t - stamped out of ' civilized eduntri within twepty-five years." So decla ed one of the delegates to the Inter- national Tuberculosis Congress at Paris, at :which Professor -Emil von ; Behring announced his cure for t; - heroines's-. Dr. Flick lays more stress upon prOpee alimeetatign and Wear of open air andeexereise in the cure ,of tuberaulbsis than.. h.e does upon a epecific remedy for the , disease, but he and other conservative physiciane express hope that Professor von. 13ehd- ing's discovery will Prove of great value' In tile treatment of consumetion. His claim that he has found, • real eoasumptIon euro inspires tb. more confidenee . because: At was he who dIsci5vered the anti -toxin now use - So wide -1Y and succeeefeily in the pre vention and cure of diphtheria. In giv- ing to the world this remedy for dread- ed diphtheria he conferred a great: PROP. EMIL VON BRFIRING. benefit upon Maekind, The debt of the world to him would lib heavy indeed should his consumption eure prove as successful as expected, thus making It possible to write down to his credit two of the most important discoveries of the age in the world df medicine. There has been some criticism of Professor_ von Behring because -of his announced intention of keeping the character of his consumption cure a secret from the world at large for a' year in order that he may reap pe- cuniary benefit from. his discovery. In explanation of this. curse it is stated that his -experiments in the prosecu- tion of his researches have been very costly. He is, a poorly paid scholar of Prussia, receiving from the Govern- ment an allowance to enable him to prosecute his studies. It takes every cent he can get to carry them 6n. In 1901 he received the Nobel prize of $40,000 for the discovery of a Vaccine for the immunization of cattle from tuberculosis. It is said that every dol- lar of this sum went toward his ex: ;tenses in making experiments. In withholding for a time the secret of his anti -toxin for diphtheria he was able to make money to apply in the same way. It is also -urged in explana- tion of his course that he desires to keep the use of the cure under his own observation for a time in order that conndence in its value may not be im- paired by premature general use. Rep- resentatives of the professor sey that the new cure will be ready for the, general public by next Auguste that it will then be cheap, so that any physician can 'obtain it, and that 'spec- ial rates will be made to philanthropic institutions and to the poor: A wealthy citizen of New York has offered Pro- fessor von •Behring $50,000 if he will announce the secret of his cure at once. He suggests that this be made a part of a fund to be contributed to the Paris physician, and the only eualification to the offer Is that the treatment must first be pronounced successful by a committee of - com- petent medical men. There is talk in Paris' of makiag up a popular sub- seription to reitribuese the professor if - he will make his dire public, and it is said if the remedy is a success he win .come into possession of an in - The Bad Cold of To -Day MAY BE PNEUMONIA TO -MORROW. The sore throat or tickling cough that, to the careleits, seems but a trivial annoyance, may develop into Pneumonia, Bronchitis, or some Throat or Lung trouble. DR. WOODS NORWAY PINE SYRUP . • • a • • • • . • contains all t'h'e lung -healing virtunes of the pine tree, and is a sure cure for Coughs, Colds and all Throat or Lung troubles. Mrs. E. Hutehin7 eon, 186 Aiwyle Street, Toronto, writes: " I h -ave beep a sufferer from Chronic Bronchitio for yeaa and have found Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrtip far better than any of the hundreds of remedies I have used. Our whole family uses it in cases o( Coughs or Colds. We would not i be without it." • Don't be humbugged into taking something " just as good," ask for Dr. Wood's and insist on getting it. Put up in yellow wrapper, three pine trees is the trade mark and price 25 ceute. A N+ie BER 24, 19 B To This Offer, and See the Cropd You Will Get been made viith it. Its power hai been Droved, again and again, an the mot dff- Reult germ diseases. Then we off ed to supply the first bottle free in every di- sease that required it. And ovet lone million dollars have been spent to an- nounce and fulfill this offer. The result ie that 11,000,000 b3tt1es have beeu uzed, mostly ia the paat two years. Today there are countless hurcd ones, scattered everywhere, to tc1lsvhat Liquozone has done. But so many others need it that', this offer is published still. In late yeare ;sci- ence has traced SCOM4 of disease a to germ attacks. Old remedies do not appy, to them. We vrish to show those sick ones —at our cost—what Liquozone can do. Where It Applies.' These are the diseenesin which Lwow - zone has been MORt employed. In tOese it hasearned its widest reputation.' lin all of these troubles we supply the first bottle free. And in all—no matter how dif- ficult—we offer each user a two months' further test without the risk of a psiny. Goitte—Gagt A.Atictse—t1"334 Armrest Beortoblells 11.heiM Preims Aevrel Troubles Coughs—Colds Coosnmptlon Contagions Dfteutss Otter--eatszr?-. Dysentery-1)1=7bn. Dyspepels—Dandrut Emma—Errs{ YhTionl—Gala a i Wrtte us if you az' ready to try Liquo- xotiet Let us buy tlie first bottle for you. Let the product iteOlf prove the good it earl, do. You *ho are waiting don't know what you miss. There are plenty to tell you if you would ask; fpr millions have al- ready used it. Some use it to get well.; some to keep well. ;Some to cure germ diseases; some as a tonic. You will use it as they do, when 'you learn what the product does. And rou will then regret that you delayed so long. What Liquozone Is. The virtues of Liquozone are derived solely from gases. The formula is sent to e,.ch ueer. The proems of making re- quires large apparatus, and from 8 to 14 days' time. It is directed by chemists of the highest clam 1The object is to so fix and combine the gases as to carry into the system a Doveerfull tonic-germioide. . contact wit. a Liquozone kills any form of disease germ, bee use genes are of vegetable (Tien. Yet,to the body lequo- zone is not only harWess, but helpful iin the extreme. That is its ,mairedieee tinetion. 'Common germicidea are poison ,hen-; taken hitt y. That is why : aiestile. Liquozone exhilarating, medicine has been so helpless in a germsi talizing„, purifying; yet no disease germ can exist in it. We purchued the itemeriean right.4 tol ueeenethoutands of taiga WI ; elierrhas—Gleet HAI Tever---Ittftuswa Lae:Apes Letinorrhee pileg_44anty E•bSIMatiSia Mr4atar4—ftgkalW totin Moores Tube -mules* trarest Also =fit forms of MeV...nowt:IS: Sidney Trouble* Liver Troubles Stomach Trouble* Viromee's Aisne* Fever, Intlemmation or eatarrh--impure tee eqe. soned blood—usually indicate a germ attack. In nerveue debilliyLiquozone acts ma T,Itallterip RecomPliallinK remarkable results. 50c. Bottle Free. If vou need Liquozone, and have Bever tried it, please send us this coupon. We will then mail you an order on a local druggist for a fulleeize bottle,and will pay the druggist ourselves for it. This Is our free gift, made to convince you; to let the product itself show you whit it can do. In justice to yourself, please accept it today, for it places you under no obligations whatever. Liquozone costs 50e. and $1. CUT OUT THIS COUPON Fill It out and mail it to The Lignozone Reny, 441404 Wabash Are., Chicago. My• disease &&&& ...• ...• •+.• I hare never tried Liquozone, to " you evil eupply me a 50e bottle free I will I. It. • •B-• 4. •O•901 ▪ • . 0 ** • *** ** SONO**. ••• ** • • . A. C D. .. • 2 3 Glre full a-4dr' vr•-•-verlto plainly. erne must have stdod m ore he perceived that beadles& At filet In rummaging about bad disturbed the ost minute se.areb dein bad gone—had been, tale for the plants which s eened the ligriter bon rmit the skull tre vanish, the frown on the Ball e threatening, thunder eiIected the rusty .creeep. I eflXGriee' of strange fnies.Of t wded unbidden to his b ▪ 'Dyak&" he growled fier er, an Englishman by head hunting Note that this offer am, to nor users poly. Any physiciert ot piaQt yet wins Liquemmis I will osgleAlt.suppliest .0.t. , Cure a Ccild in One Day romo Qqinine abiets. Past 13 ondi. This sipatter, &Wen Mon beef* isokl Jx en every i! • • corae bk 4000 trait* from` the Prix 1Laeave reserved by the French aca- demy for the commiq of tuberculos- is and will also get 1$1,000 francs set i avert for the same iurpose by a ; wealthy Brazilian, Professor von Behring was born in 1864 at Hansdorf, P ussfa; studied 18 medicine in Berlin and in 1880 became Ian army surgeon. In 84 he was ap- pointed a professor at the University :Of Halle. He was called'in 1885 to be 'director of the ;Hygienic Insti- Itute at Marburg, He is illoor eprofessor of the University of Berlin and a per- sonal friend of the Kaiser and lives ian a large medical farm near Mar- burg. The farm eompiflses some 400 acres, and on it are about 400 cows ittid several hundred h rses and other animals,. It is said the enterprise re- quires for its support about 430,000 a year. tits experiments have already ac- complished a great deal in the direct - tion of eradicating bovirte tuberculosis, whieh, according to the opinion of those at the recent tuberculosis con- gress, is transmissible to the human eeteeles. 1 In Germeny systematic methods for inoettlation of cattle to prevent the spread of tae disease among such ant - mals have been for .seVeral years in process of introduction. _ Sheep NOt4. Dried blood is said id be a reliable 1 remedy for scours in eaves, Why not for the same erouble in 1 imbs? It is safe to say that 11.o branch of farming shows better returns for mon- ey invested and labor apOlied than that of sheep farming, provld ,d it is.run on systematic business prin iples.—Amer- ican Sheep Breeder. F, A Troublesome Crleilltor. The poet Clement thdrot, being in very straitened circumstances, went to the king and saki, have come to lay before your majesty a complaint against one of my emitters whose claims I have satisfied O'er and over again, and yet he persistis in dunning and harassing, me at every opportu- nity." "Who is the scoundreirl the king in- stomacb, sire. Thhugh I have satisfied its waits tilue ritiltillt num- bersqtnever ceases to toitment, and I am utterly lueapable of mfeting its de- mands." The king was pleased with the joke and allowed the poet a pepsion on the repot. Died on tbe StusFe. In 1833 Edmund Kean was acting the part of Othello. Ile had utterecl the words, "Othello's occupatiOn is gone," when he fell into his son s arms and had just strength to whiepere "I aro dying; speak to them for tate!" and was heard by the orchestra. Iti 1S50 Mrs. Glover took her last beaeflt, but was almost unconscious all the time she was on the stage, and died three days later. In 1858 Harley whale playing Bottom in "Midsummer Night's Dream" was struck with paralysis Im- mediately after having uttered the words, "I have an exposition of sleep come upon me." He had to be carried off the boards and died within a few hours. Ilis Friendship, At the annual bushiess meeting of a country ehurch in .the 'western part of the state several of the brethren spoke of the annoyance caused at Oae Sunday services by the habit in which,some persons indulged of spitting upon the floor, especially in the neighborhood of the 'stove, says the Philadelphia Ledger, The pastor suggested that if they had a couple of cuspidors in the church perhaps the annoyance might be lessened. Whereupon a good deacon arose: "I 1110.ve that Brother A. Red Brother B. be appointed as cuspidors for the ensuing year." ..iirliftVerea• "Why are you yawning?' t inquired the landlady of little Johnny' at that -ta- ble. "I always yawn when. I'm hungry," was the reply. "But what do you do when you are sleepy?" "Go to bed." e t 1 1 PO1NTERSQR RUBeER • at/YER An up.i.tedate vire dealer in usually a good rubber judde—he is quick to discern the comparative point* of excellence that ;aim unnoticed by the Ordinary num. Many of the: largest merchants have otocked exclusive; with Merchants !Rubbers. They know that the hoe deucle rituteriaisued, the exclusive methods employed and general care exercised e their manueacture mean increased wear and pleased Osiomers. This fact:h a good guide to the ordinary buyer. blerchanta Rubbers bays the fit, style, an. pearanee eoil wearing qualities that cannot be obtained in any other brand of rubbers. - if our Sheeman doesn't sell them let us kriew. rt‘ri Branches at 4141PE0, LONDON, TORONTO, OTTAWA, ONTREAL 707 egumnO`A' VOCHApozr RUBBER CO. BERLIN CANADA . BOUITER, D. -IVES •45 COMPANY George E. Boulter Charles A. Davies' Warehouse, 24 Front Street, West Toronto . Central Ontario Ageis, Merchants Rubber,: Complete stock ready for quick deliveries. Vrite, telegeaph, telephone to factory or Toronto., NO MONEY REQUIRED "link ef it, a beautiful Ruff of Blue Fos. the nintt f•, bionableTur worn, given absolutely free. Ruch en is•se neysr Inn,10 iaefore. The only re16011 we CM pdbi'd to de Itls that we arranged for these handsome .Fureduringlho dull MIAMI in the summer and at Oise ,nearly at cast. The Ruff hi 4/ inchts long, nearly `4 Inches wide. made of the handsomest Blue Fox Fur. very rith, soft crud flulTy. It Is -warmly vet:16A lined with the same ithadeuf satin and orrounented with four long tallsof bine Fox fliP0. Such a handsome Fur bus abysr before been given away, and yon =eget it so easy, Jon send uayour123110.5 and address, plainly. sad we will mail yea 2 ctn. seta of icttire Post Cards to sell ti 10e, a set (4 cards to a W.) They ate beantifely colored. °lithe *age, and sell like hot mikes. Such an rtunity was never offered before to the women and r of =ado. You couldn't buy anything lathe For Lefti that wookllook richer, be snore becoming (Immo to-da71413: irWdstettimiemet you tatn7 adewtte"Puleturef'"cetiPost't•Car-Wrislate' plO, Colonial Art Co., DNA., Toronto Single Harness t:RAN1 TRU Call and hasped our genuine rahher trimmed hernees at $20.00 hatter value than any $25.00 factory make. We guarantee thorn beeettse we make them ourselves ; material, etyie and quality sire the beet. They are the ben value to be had in single harness and we will retake our reputation for good hat - nese upon them. RAILWAY SYSTEM A few, days at the Mineral Springs of St.- Uetherines, M. CLeenens, has benefittod the health of hundreds. Nothing is equal to the treatment. Try it. Both pointe are situated on the direot Lino of the Grand Trunk IR,C3E3S o East and West A complete istOCk of Bishop, Gallo - why and Saskatchewan at Specisl prices. as usual we have the very' bort val- ues in horse blaekete. Quality the beet and prim the lowest, M. BRODERICK, CADY BLOCK., SEAvORT Sore Throat e..nd Coughs A aiin.ple, effective and sinfe ietztedy for all thro i irritations s found in Cresolene Antiseptic Tellets They cornblee the gertnicidatvaht c ofCraoknewi tbc soothing properties of slit•pery elm and li i00. All Drumlins becenalled Serric,e, Direct Connections to Montreal. Queheo, Portlend, Boston, aa:iifax, St. James, Detroit, Chicago and aII Western and Southern Pointe. PullmanSleeper' s Parlor and Dining ders adi through trains.. For tickets, illustrated literature and Ifull information osii on W. SOMERVILLE, Town Agent. A. PHILLIPS, Depot Ticket Agen ezt.msgreirt teo Tho Cod You Have Mways Eoe. intim e came once they -wo eephunindgred. nyaerdosuaghwtaynot er alone. And then devilish ingenuity of coin ver shot tearoWofWke ildthe all manfowl Lrongb the trees with dame titIng and. wild eyed, Jen e lerseside in an inconceiv e of time. She was no belt& of the grove, b nds„ gazing, pallid in chee et group of rocks on the h. at 1 the matter?" be don't know!' enly. "I had a dream,' bit "4eL You were stru me aWful thing down the t� the rocks. at not near thelilace, boriottsly. It cost him tthe. His broad chest with each respiration. 'yes,I unders e and ran to save you. • here I sate* somethl with waving arme, and fire 421ied, and then yett eame," The sailor walked slo -rocks. A fresh chip out oi -Allowed where the bullet str loge bowlder was wetas if been splashed over it. ge ooked intently into the wet° la was to be -seen, but saw and were eddying up free where it sheved sae the shore. Iris followed hint "See!" 4.tneitedly. "I was not mistain was sometleing here." A creepy sensation ran up - Spine and passed behind his, this spot the drowned Lase lying. Like an inspiration knowledge that the cuttle dreaded octopus, abounds in His face was livid:when he - s. "You are overwrottgh ;Reece& tigue, Miss Deane," he salt You saw was probably a knew the ludicrous substitu. not be questioned: "Please, down again." eannot," she protested. frightened:.' - Frightened! By a dream', aylight!" `But why are you so pale?: !Alarmed you?" en you ask? Did you ni *gree signal?' Rer inquiring glance 'felt breathless from agitation 'flflning. He 'wasperturbed For an instant she 44_ bissouL. I go back," ehe ;a ugh I would rather Tou. What are you doing? "Seeking a place to lay < 'Ile answered, with gruff el "You renily must rest, At hereon will be bre and become lir ie again sought be nd the Bailor retur They separated - each thinking only ef the o te• and enafort. HAPTER OSS the parelml. he stick discarded his Want!. ran