Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1895-07-31, Page 6re `eree;;Ire rt air:. ilis " 1 rive taken Ayer's Pelle for many Teare; and .a,5vays derated the est re- s;cits i'rom their use, I~o • Stomach and Liver tx)UWes`.and for the cure of headache caused icy these derangements, Ayer's rills anet be equaled. They are easy is Are the Best all-round family reedielne I have ever g1O p .' 1' • IIA JoaN8ox,868Rider . AYES' S PILLS lit. t:cn Awards at World's Fair. Awes $arsaparillafor the blood. e H:�ren News-Recora h 111.25 a YeaS1.00in Advance WEDNESDAY. JULY 31st. 1895. The First Paper. 'T'UBIIISHED IN UPPER CANADA—IN OLD KINGSTON, .1801. • 4'1l4tl''Closes.up there;' The -order rang out .sharply, echoing'' frain rogk .fo, rock1 And seemingto .die, .away In belle* ,. rnurrm.ur$ up the pre.. olpitnui slid h1c ak mmtides. of the:. h1,1t1., A. H. St. Germaine, of Toronto, writes as follows in the Kingston Whig : On 25th September, 1801, apppeared the first paper in Uppe% G7'nada. It was printed at Kingston and named The Gazette. It was founded by Stephen Miles and Charles Keridall. The type, press and other '` material necessary to equip a printing office were brought from Montreal to Kingston in a batteau, a voyage • which occupied thirteen days—a distance now covered in .six hours. The Kingston Gazette continued to he published as a :.meekly paper from 1801 to 1818, when it ceased to exist. Its death gave birth to two papers in 1819, the -Kingston Chronicle and the Kingston Herald. The constant and able editorial writers and correspondents of these two papers at the timewvere Chief Justice Hager- iuttn, Colonel Cartwright, B. Bidwell, Rev.. Mr. Strachan (afterwards bishop at Toronto). The other papers which made their advent in Kingston prior to thepublication of the Whig, were the atr-rot and the Spectator ; the former started in 1829, and the latter in 1830. SUPPORTED RIR JOHN A. Kingston, on 17th December, 1833, spectus was issued and circuln.ted cast, announcing that in the owing month the first number of a commercial and political journal, rnperial size, would he published to be led the British Whig, and issued as semi-weekly. Its editor and proprie- r was to be Edward John Barker, M. D. And after the British hig was issued (on the 1st January, ), its political principles were in full pathy with its title. It remained rgan of the Liberal party until th'� Ilion of 1837, when it drifted into onservative ranks, at which time ohn A. Macdonald was a young opular politician, and the VVhig ned his faithful follower for five long years. In 1871 the P tn'gston News became the preferred • Conservative organ, and Dr. Barker, feeling the effects of his long and tiresome labors as a journalist, gave up the Whig to his grandson, the present proprietor'. CANADA'S FIRST DAILY'. On my return to Canada from Cali- ornia " in 1852, I established myself gain in the printing business in Guelph nd Toronto, and, while the British Whig has accorded to it. the honor as • the first daily newspaper publish - Upper Canada or Lower Canada, d the honor of establishing the one cent daily paper in Canada, t the same time I inaugurated system of advertising of a for certain class of adver- 'llich custom now prevails Sal papers of Canada and tates. ,the printers who made good or themselves in the world rutting from printing offices my control in Guelph and to were: Rev. Dr. Sutherland, lssibnary secretary at Toronto ; Mrs. Wallace, a Presbyterian rftinis- r ; Rev. E. Didson, Baptist minister at Woodstock ; the late Dr, Diamond, Toronto ; C. D. Barr, proprietor of the 'Lindsay Post ; the late Mr. Waller, formerly Mayor of Ottawa and Regis- trar•of county of Carleton, etc. The•little dinridQ 74014.soldiery"e}ose• un rapidly" SA their ttrizz**d old Coptaan spRlKe,. slid ed him silently with their ca,thines grenntted. and the 10ek. of dull and apathetic 0000 4e do ther • friers that is charaeterietie of -their clave, • , mien,"said• the' IYeatner.p:mitten and grayheaded leader, regard;ing them ale rP1Y from U,r}der his Sh'ag'gy eye- braws, " the wolf ie driven to his last lair. A,6, or nearly ail,. of hie people have been killed off during the weeps that -we have been following them over these dreary hill% i1 --the bandit, the robber, the. Andreano of the hills.--nan- not last out longer now. His hour 1a come; If we are but watchful. Up and up he has been driven, often nearly falling into our hands, yet as often e: - caping. ' Nbw, behind him rises the sheer, straight line of the bills, ort eith- er side are two good companies of our men ; we stand in the front. The great Andreano, terror of our hills "— the captain laughed softly in his throat —"is already as one dead. You know your orders ; he is to ne shot down like a dog by the first man who sights him. You understand?" A low, deep murmur went up from the men, and then 'in a single voice spoke ; the speaker, who stood in the front rank, giving the salute rapidly : " But, my captain, what of the child? ' The old man turned on him fiercely. " The child! What child?" The soldier—a little, lithe, swarthy man, with gleaming white teeth sh'n- ing under his brown moustache- ea - luted again. ' The child, my captain, he brought from Massafino, below there in the val- ley. The child of the woman who had loved him. The captain, interested in spite of himself, knitted his 'brows and .bade the soldier proceed. "What of this child ? speak." Thus encouraged, the little man with the gleaming teeth • saluted once more, and, with many a gesture of fingers, shoulders and eyebrows, rapoly told his story. "'Twas but a year ago, my captain. The woman—I know not her name— had loved him in the days when he was a lad tilling the fields down there. She was alone. Her friends were dead or had left her. There was no one but the priest who could help her, and the priest was too poor. What would you?" with an appealing glance at his fellows and rapid shrug of his shoulders. "She had been married—this woman who had loved the Andreano—and had a ch']d, a girl child ; but her man lay in the sandy graveyard over against the vil- lage church, yonder, dead, a year be- fore, of the fever, so she sent to An- dreano." He paused for a moment, spat quick- ly upon the ground and went on again. " She sent a message to him up here in the hills, my captain, and he came to her. He came down In the night and saw her—came, armed to the teeth, and daring all or any to touch him. And in the morning, when the sun was coming up over the hills, he had gone, and the child with him, and the woman who had loved him lay dead, with a smile on her face. That is all, my captain." The man saluted again and drew back. " And the child, where is it now?" asked the captain, slowly. "'The child is with hlmStny captain." " What matters it?" muttered the captain. " Kill the child, too. K 11 off the whole brood. Come, we waste time. Forward!" Yet, for all that, as the captain marched at the head of his men with knitted brows, he was silent and very thoughtful, and might almost have been thought to have been in doubt. Once or twice he shook his head slowly and muttered somethingbeneath his breath. .He, too, had hrd the strange story at an earlier time—had heard how this terible and s:n-stained man. with a price upon his head, had gone down into the valley—into the midst of men ready and willing to sell him—car- rying his life in his hand, to see a pea- sant woman who had sent for him ; he had heard, too, how the robber had car- ried the child into the hills and h carefully tended it there ever since. It was late in the afternoon when the little company drew near the end of its quest, and, with levelled carbines, crept silently on amid the rocks that lay strewn about the place. Suddenly on: man—the little soldier with the gleam- ing teeth, who had spoken before— cried out sharply': "See, my captain, he comes—with the child 1" It was true. Even as they looked they saw an active,plcturesque figure spring- ing from rock to rock toward them, bearing on its shoulders a laughing, crowing, dark haired child. One hand of the man held the baby,' the other grasped a carbine, and the late after- noon sun gleamed on the weapons to his belt. They saw, too, that the baby had, fastened lightly to one chubby fist, a fluttering white cloth. Seeing them, the man stood quite still watching them, only the white cloth fluttering' in the wind. "A flag of truce !" grunted the cap- tain, sharply calling a halt—he was too true a sildler not to regard such a sign. "What does he Want, I wonder ? Lower your arms there, men, there is plenty of time," he added grimly. 'The robber came on again rapidly, and finally halted a little distance above them, with the baby still perched upon , hie shoulder. Then he, too, lowered his carbine and stood there, with head up- raised, looking at them defiantly. "You have me 1" he cried at last, his voice ringing out clearly through the still air. "You,have tracked me up here —you, a hundred against one man. Yet, even now, you should not have taken me calmly thus, even though I stand alone—you should not have taken me thus, but for the little one." He glanced up for a moment at th• baby on his shoulder and drew one ht- tle hand down to his lips, and then" faced the soldiery again, speaking di- rectly for the first time to the old 001- eer : - "You are a brave man, captain," he said, moat appealingly, "and such men do not make war on infants. What do • you do with the little one my captain?" The captain shrugged his shoulders. "The child is nothing, Andreano," he said sternly. "She may die with you." With a bound the b ndit had sprung back froth they, and In an instant the You may child WAS Oft hitt shOillder Anil' behind ;flim, and he'knelt there `filth his car* bine levelled, ilei ly,taging theta. "Beasts I" he Cried.' ,""t come; to Yillk under the white`iiagr weal kn,awing that I must die, 4114 askln nothing'. for' m.Y- self; 1 crave only that you ehou1d spare trio innocent little ane, '.$now thlot then, sincexgu Will not.”4 Will 15111 the OVA t than shall 1[abe each your murderous bows, and will die such a death as few ,min have Med, with a dozen coward sgll s to bear mine own' to hell, Now, What say you ?" Ike knelt there Suite cal ly, with Ws whine leveled and With the child thrust behind him. Bat the'old captain had stepped forward and raised his top, Andreano 1" he cried, "You are right, We do not melte war on babes. Thip hunting 'down of one man is but little to my liking and I will not foul it more. The child 18 safe." The man rose and lai{1 down his car- bine and took up the child, agan. "And the little one shall go with you down into the valley in safety?" he asked slowly. "I have given my word. No harm \ shall come to the little one. Give it to me." . The robber kissed the baby's soft face ,passionately—once, twice, thrice—and then moyed quickly toward the captain, down the rocks, and passed the child into his arms. "I thank you, my captain," he said, gravely. "And now you are to shoot me ?" "Such are our orders, Andreano." The other shrugged his shoulders. "So be it," he•said sofely, "only cover the face of the little one that she may not see." The captain passed the child into the hands of the little soldier of the swar- thy face,and they took It-puickly out of his sight. Then came an order rapidly given and another; a volley rang out starting the echoes on those lonely hills fora moment; there was a half sobbing rather tf1 n she .. i p IF `(9U ,QQIN'T QSJa,GT, T.0 Q11-1$RS" • ST•QFF$1(Qt) ftEED,NQ, KATE. *ntleepti9 .klurisio'e?r .YS 4v0/U4tt► the 114tert I.le*it * 1 rbc$ ce 1Siajroi$ TL 1ea4Ii» SIs to-abstituto •sound "Meath for fad Oneµ. -.Ouse the Method was pangeleuuM, An article reeesttlY published in the Brooklyn. FBagfe described certain ad- wanes made in.the science of dentistry within the last decade or two. The practitioner of tq,day is no longer a destructive, but a. reparative agent. 10X - traction is no longer the logical remedy for an aching molar, and if youy care to pay the difference in cost the dacan- ctep in your gums can be filled—not bY teeth set. on a delluloid plate, but bY the natural article, transplanted from another's jaw. This work of transplanting teeth is something which, while entirely famil- iar with the higher grade practitioners, the general public knows very litt'e about. Like many other so-called dis- coveries it is really nothing absolutely novel—merely an elaboration and im • provement of an old system abandoned years ago because of conditions then existing which rendered the practice dangerous. These conditions having been removed, the rejected method was revived wltr eminent success, and, it is now recognized not only by individual praotit'or.ers of high standing, but by all the leading dental colleges. Nearly a century has elapsed since Sir John Hunter, an eminent London anatomist, discovered that healthy teeth extracted from the jaws of one person could be transferred to those of another. He based his operations in this direction on the supposition that the planted tooth should always be made to fit the socket and in the ma- jority of his experiments it is believed 1 cry, and Andreano's course was run. that he inserted the new tooth in the So it came about that when the sol- still unhealed wound left by the ex- diers marched down into the valley traction of another. Valuable as Hun - again one of them bore upon a light ter's general contributions were to pole the head of the notorious bandit, medical science his method of tra,ns- for all the wide eyed peasantry to gape ..planting teeth was not destined to en - at, and, strangest sight of all, upon the joy uninterrupted popularity. He him - front of the captain's saddle, with the self recognized its great fault and captain's arm about her,sat a laughing, others were not sloW to apprehend what crowing, dark-haired baby.—Firefly. the discoverer of the system was ready NOTHING STRANGE. Intelligent people, whd realize the important part the blood holds in keeping the body in a normal condit- ion, find nothing strange in the num- ber of diseases that Hoods Sarsapar- illa. is able to cure. So many troubles remit from impure blood that the best Mway to treat them is through the ood, and it is far better to use only harmless vegetation compounds than to dose to excess With quinine, calomel and. other. 'drugs. By treating the liloa b:With. Hood's Sarsaparilla, serol., NU. salt rheum and what are common., 13 called "humors';" dyspepsia, cat- artiiil, ribeurnatism, neuralgia, con. sulmptio4 and other troubles that or- iginate .in imputities of the blood or Impaired circulation, can all he cured. Suspicious. Hoax : "thatstory of yours reminds me Of a tramp:" Toe& :` ' "Ho* so ?" Male: "It Won't wash." Catarrh—tee Nasal Balm. Quick, nn�eitive eure. Soothing, cleansing, beiiling: CUBAN HATRED OF SPAIN. It Hae Aeon Shown by Seven Rebellions Since 1829. In the present revolt, as in the six considerable uprisings that have, again and again, plunged Cuba into turmoil since 1829, the Cubans and the Span- iards are arrayed against one another, Many people have very hazy notions as to the distincton between tre Cubans and the Spaniards in Cuba. The terms are by no means interchangable. When a Cuban speaks of a Spaniard on his island he means a man of Spanish blood who was born in Spain. If his sons are born in Cuba they are Cubans: In the course of one or two generations they''become thorough Cutins in sen- timent and hate the Spaniards as bit- terly as though their ancestors had lived on the island a couple of centuries. We can hardly realize the cordial hatred with which these two peoples regard each other. Associated in business, speaking the same language, attending the same churches, meeting a hundred times a day, they never commingle4hp one people. They scarcely ever form mutual friendships and in society, if not in business, each goes his own way.. It is a disgrace for a Cuban to marry a Spaniard. Her mother will not in- vite a Spanish youth to her house un- less she is certain he has become a Cuban in sentiment. The world does not present a stranger anomaly than the relations between these two kindred peoples. 'The expla- nation is not far to seek. It is found in the abnormal political relatl;ns of the two classes. The Spaniard goes to Cuba to make what he can out of the Island, and then, as a rule, he gees home. Mest of the thousands of Span- ish incomers are government ofilc:a:s, employes ,and soldiers, whose business it is to make all possible pickings for Spain, and incidentally to line their own pockets well. The Cuban stands no chance except in the industrial and commercial lines. There Is no field for ,him in the liberal professions or in the public service. If he is shrewd and lucky he may grow rich in commerce or planting, but he can take no part in public affairs, he can not worship as he pleases, he has few rights worth men- tioning, and he is taxed to death. If he owns real estate he pays 30 per cent. of its Income into the captain -general's treasure box. If he kills an ox he must pay a dollar. It costs him $15 a year to own a carriage, or even an ox cart. He cannot sell a horse or build a wharf without paying for a government per- mit. The Spanish agents, from captain - general down, have almost absolute au- thority. Some of them have been hon- est men Who have tried to deal justly. The names of many of them have been loaded with Infamy. They have bought their offices with the distinct understanding that they were to use their, official place as a meads of acquiring wealth. No•won- der a deadly hatred exists between the native Cubans and the mass of Spanish incomers, all of whom are regarded as being, directly or indirectly, the agents of Spain for their impoverishment and abasement.—Philadelphia Tinies. �; , t „ f l li bl, . Brand We ha�re �,., limited 1�,t><a�t�t,� A, I<1�� fld '�� Pure 1Vianins, BirideeTwine—i-only 0ents some ,t'thisalQv# price before it its aid sold to acknowledge. It was found that cer- tain blood diseases were liable to be transferred along with teeth, and so this particular 1100 of dental surgery was abandoned as too dangerous for pursuit. When the system of antiseptic sur- gery was evolved, Dr. Younger of San Francisco conceived the idea of apply- ing it to Hunter's old method of tooth transplanting. He very properly ar- gued that a tooth thoroughly cleaned and subjected to a bath or ant:septic fluid was no longer a medium for the transfer of disease. Moreover, instead of dealing with the matter on the lines adopted by its discoverer, that is, that the tooth should be made to fit the sock- et or cavity, Dr. Younger worked on the principle that the socket should be made to fit the tooth. His experiments under the fiew conditions proved emi- nently satisfactory and it speedily be- came evident that the art of trans- planting teeth had become,a recognized branch of dental surgery. To -day the system is pursued by all eirst-class dentists in New York and by many in Brooklyn. It is not popular in the most correct sense of the term, because it costs more than ordinary people can afford and, beside, it can hardly be carried to the extent of giving a man or woman a whole set of ivories that once belonged to some one else. Still, It is practiced in many cases and will be continued. Nearly all the lead- ing dentists In New York nowadays de- vote their energies to saving teeth. With all the conditions now militating against the development of perfect teeth, this is no easy matter. It gives them enough to do without devoting valuable muscular tissue to the ex- traction of big grinders with roots like anchor flukes. When they have a pa- tient whose tooth really must come out they pack him off to a certain doctor who makes a practice of doing such things. If the extracted tooth Is not decayed, this practitioner puts It away in an antiseptic bath, where it remains with some score of others until a den- tist has a patron whose jaw has a va- cancy that could be filled by transplant- ing. A demand is then made upon the individual who keeps teeth in stock and the order is filled with regard to the • requirements of shape, size, etc. It Is no longer necessary, as in the days of Hunter, to have a recently made cavity ready for a newly extracted tooth. A skillful dentist will make an incision In the gum, 1f necessary, and there'n in- sert the tooth which has lain perhaps for months In its hath of disinfectant, The tissue heal, and in a short time the transplanted tooth is as firmly rooted as any of its neighbors which have been grown on the soil. Ordinarily, where it is determined to replace an extracted tooth by transplanting, it Is custom- ary to keep the cavity open until Its new occupant Is introduced. The length of time the cavity is open has nothing to do with the success of the trans- planting process. A prominent New York dentist relates an instance of a woman who lost a transplanted tooth soon aft8reits insertion In her gum. She was out of town at the time and her dentist was inaccessible. She filled the cavity with cotton wool and so kept it open for several days. Then she fell sick and passed through a long attack of typhoid fever. When she realized that she was seriously 111 and censer quently liable to delirium, she instruct- ed fhe nurse to keep the cavity in the gum still open, and those directions were implicitly foliwoed when the sick woman was no longer able to attend to the matter herself. When she re- covered and returned to town the cav- ity was in a condition to receive anoth- er tooth. In some cases where the roots and base of a tooth remain intact your modern dentist will fit a new top and fasten It to the old foundation with a neat rivet of gold. ARLAND I( e.. Swire` --- DISCOUNT SALE'` - 10 per cent. off for CASH for a little while. • Come and buy a fine Rocker, only $1.00. Coming in, lot of Curtain Poles 25c. complete, imported, Ebony, Mohagony &c. Fine lot of chairs. Picture Frames made, Beautiful Pictures, ready framed cheap. Nice Bed -room Suites from $10,b0, fine Suite for $13. Easels, Photo -Frames, Parlor Suite $22, Oak and Tapestry, Plush Suite,•very good for you, Rattan Rockers to sell off. Side -board $6.50. Good$251mat- tresses in Sea -grass and wool, cocoa fibre &c. Spring beds &c. J. C. Stevenson, Furniture Emporia Bamboo tables, 25c., 35c., 40c. A couple of Secretaries and Cupboard at a b gain. Patent Extension Table $5, no leayes. BICC PROFITS Small = oeetments. Returning prosperity will make many rich, but nowhere can they make so much within a abort time as by sucoeeefu l Spoonlatton in Grain, Provisions and Stock.•�e, 1000 FUR EACl3 DOLLAR;INVESTED can be made by our . = Systematic Plan of Speculation originated by us. All successful speoulators operate on a regular system. It le a well•known fact that there are thousands of men So all parte of the United Stares who, by Bye - tem Ale trading through Chicago brokers, make large amounts every year, ranging from a few thousand dol- lars for the man who invests a hundred or two hundred dollars up to $50,09: to 5100,000 or more by 'those who invest a few thousand. It is also a tact that those who make the largest profits from comparatively small investments on this plan are persona who live away from Chicago and invest through brokers who thoroughly understand sys- tematic trading Onr plan does not risk the whole amount invrated on any trade, but covers both sides, ao that whether market r ee or r bort time. WRITE FOR CONVINCING PROOFS, also our Manual on ,nceesefal speculation and our Daily Musket Report,besfulloreferences in r regard to oar sanding and sucrs. ALL cess. Our Manual explains margain tFor further Information address THOMAS & CO., Bankers and Brokers, 241-242 Rialto Building, CHICAGO, ILL. the t is fella it brings a steady profit that piles up enormously in a e The Devil Up to Date. The popular contemporary conception of Satan is of a highly successful man of the world. It is admitted that there are shady spots in his past history, that he has done some things that he should regret, that he is a hazardous associate and an unsafe person to have transac- tions with. But conversely it is real- ized that he Is rich, powerful, and at- tractive, and intimately concerned and interested in promoting the, material prosperity of the human race. He Is known to be full of enterprise and pub- lic spirit, disposed to make things pleas- ant, and powerful in carrying the enter- prises with which he til eencerned to a prtmfltable issue. It is true that he is 'Understood to be unserupnloue, but It is felt that success excuses very much, and that when an individual has at- tained a position which enables him to be useful to the public it Is a mistake to be over -nice about rejecting his good officet; because in early life, w;:en his necessities were more pressing, his methods or affiliations were not always such as a conscientious person could approve. ... _ . . 870 -Orn * Accidents Attending Barn- rais—ings. It is usually indicative of Netter times when building operations become gen- eral in a community. It shows that economy and thriftiness have been ex- ercised by the farmer, and hence, new and improved buildings will necessary follow. But while such may or may not be the case, how lamentable is the fact that scarcely a barn -raising takes plane nowadays, without an accident accompanying it, by which some per- son has sustained fractured hones, is maimed for life, or has been killed out- right. utright. Although the season for rais- ing barns has only just commenced, still within a radius of about twenty- five miles two deaths and four or five serious injuries have occurred already this season. In most cases the cause is the direct result of the erring judg- ment of the victim ; but, sometimes, we believe, through • neglect of proper precautions on the part of the owner of the building. The choosing of sides and contesting for the first completion of that part of the structure assigned to each side, is invariably, attended by fatal results, and should. in our esti- mation, be done away with, for men become excited on such occasions, and, we fear some are made more so by a little beverage. At such times particu- larly. liquor ought not to be given to the hands, who should be clear and cool-headed.—Acton Free Press. Furniture With a Hlatory. Kitty—Not one of our parlor chairs iita.nds straight ; they have all lost a castor or something. Tbm—Ah, I suppose every one of them has a history.—Life. Woman. Mr. Jinklets—What de you' think of the coming woman ?" Mr. Blinlitets---Wen, if the ys thing like the going woman she'll' be late.—'netroit Free Press. , . . Wan For Over Fifty Years Mae. WiNnnow's Soomaswo Stowe has been used by millions of mothers for their children while teething. If disturbed at night and broken of your rest bya sick child suffering and crying with pain of Cutting Teeth semi at once and get a bottle of "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup" forehildren Teething. It will relieve the poor little s'fferer immediately. Depend upon it, mothers, there is no mistake about it. It cures Diar- rhoea, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, encs Wind Celle, Battens the Gums, rednies Inflammation, and gives tone and energy to the whole system. "Mrs. Wlnslrw'e Soothing Syrup" ror children teething is pleasant to the taste and is the prescription of one of the oldest and beat female phyac:ans and nurses in the United States. Price twenty five cents a bottle. Sold by all druggieta throughout the world. Be sure and ask for "Mae. WINSLOW'e SOOTHING SYRUP." The Out -Door Woman. From Harper'' Bazar to Proper control over the ng apparatus is one of the most ia1 things to be learned by a • mer. The value of slow, deep res 'on, both for long and short distarie can hardly be overestimated, and point is not always emphasized the many treatises devoted to the art. A young woman who has won several swimming races both here anti abroad attributes much of her success to her superiority over her competito - ''' the matter of "wind," to use the tereal athletic term. She is a singer an con- sequently has had the advantage of a thorough training in the science of cor- rect breathing. By practice she has enabled herself to walk two and one- half blocks in the interval from one in- halation to another. Swimming un- der water is of course easy to her, one breath sufficing to carry her a consid- erable distance beneath the surface. In a long race she makes it a practice to drop under about every forty strokes. swim six or seven, and rise to the surface again. This increases her speed materially, on account of the slight resistance offered to the body t when it is entirely submerged in water. When on the surface she follows the rule of all good swimmers in allowing herself to sink as low as possible, shoulders, chin, and mouth well under, the nostrils being just far enough out to enable her to breathe. • It is said that a drowning person always rises twice after sinking, but that when the body goes down for the third time, it remains under. This is usually because the air is soon exhaust- ed xhausted from the lungs, or they he o filled with water taken in co gasps by the terrified victi could but have presence enough to take a deep by each rise to the surface, a' refrain from inhaling while under water, there seems no reason why he shou,jd not come up any number of times. This would allow greater opportunity of being rescued. The difficulty, how- ever, is that very few people who are not swimmers are able to keep their senses about theta under such circum- stances, and even if they knew the proper thing to do, would be likely to forget it in their fright. A Zealous Officer. -- Wart : "Here now i It is agin the law to ride that wheel shin the side- walk." Beginner : "But 'Tin not riding. I'm only trying to." "Be jahers, thin, Oi will run ye in for givin' an akkyrohatic exhibition wid- out alicense." FOR YOUR OUTING &O 10 PIOTUIlLSIE MERINO ISLUNO. ONS THOUSAND MILES OP LAKE RIDS AT SMALL EXPENSE. RaLIEP is Srx Hooas. Dietreesing Kidney an Bladder disoaaee relieved in six hours by the" Naw GREAT SOUTH AMERICAN KIDNEY CURE." This new remedy is a great surprise and delight to physicians on account of fta exceeding promptness in relieving pain in the bleeder, kidnoye, back and every part of the urinary paaeagoa in male or female. It relieves retention of water and pain in pa=sing It almost im- mediately- If you want quick relief and cure this if our remedy. Sola by Watts dI Co. Druggiete. Visit this Historical Island, which is the grandest summer resort on the Great Lukes. It only costs about 13 from Detroit ; $15 from Toledo ; 18 from Cleveland, for the round trip, ncluding meals and berths. Avoid the heat and dust by traveling on the D, & C. floating palaces. The attractions of a trip to the Mackinac region are unsurpassed. The island itself is a grand romantic spot, its climate most invigorating. Two new steel passenger steamers have just been built for .the upper lake route, costing $800,000 each. They are equipped with every modern convenience, annunciators, bath rooms etc., illuminated throughout by eledtricityq, and aro guaranteed to he the grandest, largest and raft steamers on fresh ,water. These steamers favorably eoinpare With the great ocean liners in con- atructton and speed. Four trips per week between Toledo, 'Detroit, Alpena, Macki- nac, St. Ignace, Petoskey, Chicago, " Soo," 1 Marqbette and Duluth. Daily between Cleveland and Detroit, and Cleveland and Putiin•Bay: Tho piilatial equipment makes travelingon these steamers thor- bughly enjdyale, Send for illustrated 3eseriptive, ahtphlet. Address A. A. 8anatifiz, 0:1', A., D, sC., Detroit, Mich A Natural Curiosity. "Charley dear," said Mrs. Hunni- mune, "I don't think that I take enough interest in things that men care for. Won't you tell me some- thing about baseball Y" "Of coarse. Anything that I Can." "I've noticed that sometimes when a club gets heat it's because the umpire doesn't do t ight." "Yea." "And sometimes the weather is ., right." "Yes." "And sometimes because the audi- ence doesen't do right." "Yes." "Well, Charley, dear, what I want to know is, what have the play- ers to do with the game ?" FARMERS wanting Hardy, Native Stock to plant this coining Fall or Spring may pay for it in work. We want men with or without experience on full or part time. Salary and ex- penses or commission.: Wils at once for further in formation.—BROWN BROTHERS COMPANY, Continental Nurseries, Toronto, Ont. -872-8m. r5 Aa.ril Yogi_ y �'