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The Wingham Times, 1894-07-20, Page 6z9; 'Young Man I:+at km3fora Soft 011.ngt(int 11;1.('°,F ;1 Sunng Tuan bad just (entered the .,;.. , id' the ,aln!rintuutt lit of a rail - PUMAS .11LLY 20, 1.80-i, • mall division til as the official lifted Ws eyes to inspect the hest applicant t' ir' a slender :,lice of his valuable! New Ontario- time he beheld a y'ntt11 upon whom the suns 811(1 Mouses of twenty prop'. I have noticed in the columns aithin the last yesulzluie w and winters had ,your paper within or t1"118 i p , , , . r, bolded their somewhat varying ttVOollcO 111;111'hlle letters written 'tt„ His complexion aPas U#',tell by settlers and Crowle Lands agents j, ,1 sort.1''s linen, ill so ran ,flit. a: to l 1 rt , er ,. • r goo .i giving, a 1 concerning Algoma „ t' g t' as it was exposed to the gaze of the ar cl:�a1 of information n� to its resources and the opportunities tortunitie.; vulgar was ittilaeulate; not a spot 1 Ge 1 01*~rilll:li' or any such thing twos to .(Int iudltcernents it ULM'S les tl •e ' brushed evict o' Inuuigrattion anti as ; be towel upon his carefully u 11 f -, , ' 1 r '� was divided Eleel 11 tlnitbticws a goo l many or year 1 garments. His hair tt a, In r readers are interested in e subject: the middle. I send you by book post a ropy t't What eon I deo for you? asked the official. The youth indicated that , • > t t lnatn 11 Con - great 1( ( Illi the andbc 1. f II desire ` of Ids soul was a he d Slt e 1 t •f) • personal persist,'?, :llgulu<1 for e en 1 �' = position (» t the rotor is some depart- published c') ll t -.,...-Sete w111C11 has rl'el'tltly. been • 1 1 < ' )ublishecd in London, England, f�:r : ment under the official's direct and I (immediate supervision. Now if there circulation amongst the tenet t i , ()Id r'l. I antler , r5 anyhudy who can by a sort of in - farmers of the , l I < , telleetual flashlight ,Ince$~ and with stance an edition of 50,000 is being 1 ' ' a printed and that the same will be i ko:ln kt•ie rapidity, take a composite carefully distributed amongst the i phetog•ralih of a Tutors weight and tenant turners in the Old Lancl•'byi Ill, 1111(1 111PBSnre, the modern rail- ir CharlesTupper,the High ('one- ,load official is the individual who z i55ioner. • can do it. II( die( it upon this oe- 1 will ask you kindly to rend the easion, and this is what the railroad "Handset Ik" rtu efully and then give =' i official said to the youthful' subject your re•lcle(s who may be interested: of this sketch in the sill pet such extracts and in- Young man, I Understand you are Amnion therefrom as y uti may sec looking fur a position on this road. Yeti will notice it gives infi,rula. Yes, sir, said the youth modestly; tisn tulle st:itist:es about the whole of I that is just what I am looking. for. the t•nst Gauntry known as "len Pott would like to have a position Ontario" or North Western Onttu•io,suppose, where you could Co I lne tt 1'i'owillce 111 itself,and containing around at 1) o'clock i11 the morning 'besides the mainland or North tihu: 11111`1 go home about 3 o'clock in the the large Island.; of Manitoulin, after • - Yes sir, interrupted the youth. t. 1 Cockburn, and tir..Iuaeph lying 1.1 front. 1 A position, continued the official, Might I also 11x1: you to Su�;ge'r't to 1 where the work would be rather anti or your readers who have friends i clean and not too laborious and— or acquaintances in the old country •' 05, sir, interjected the young that think likely t(i emigrate that; i loan, the tide of his hopes rising sev- thet' should ase: them to (ire p al lino i oral notches above the :detest water to Sir Charles Tupper, , Bart, High ; ma rk.ot his most sanguine antieipa- C'ulunlissioller for (.alnld11,1.7 Victoria 4 tlo118: street, London, England, and they I And, continued the bright eyed superintendent, where your monthly eau get a copy. I mayacicl that it few copies havecompensation would equstl. and per - been sent out by Sir Charles to lou haps surpass that of the average and that a5 lulls: as I stave tiny 011 •young elan of your age and ability. hand 1 will be glad to send a copy les—yes, sir, said the youth with to, any one of your readers who may a nervous twitch developing among be lookingfor land for his sons null the tender burls of his physiognomy who willsend ale his address andtt'hic!1 finally blossomed out into a return postage . full 5111110 of Tallnagian proportions, Yours faithfully, 'its mouth at last assuming the curve FREI Resist::. tf the rainbow, with its two extremes well nigh inserting' themselves with- in the ear pan projectiles standing out u1)o11 the Side Of hes phrenological ri 01. 'Well, said the railroad official, With a peculiar and somewhat mali- cious smile playing upon his face, there's one position, only one—exact- ly ane position of that sort on this road—and I've got it and I don't propose to resign. The moral of whiclr is that theie is very little room in this world for the many who is not frilling to work4larcl for ail that he hopes to get mid hold. An increase in salary usually fol- Iows an increase in efficiency-. A young man should -seek to make Sault St. Marie, Onto Nothing strange Intelligent people,. wb•, re.uize the im- portant part the brood holue In keeping the t o.i) in a normal condition, u, Nothing strdni;'e+ to the number of dis- ease that H'.ud's Sarsaparilla is alee to cure. Su many trouDies result from iw.. 1 ore bk.oJ [het the hest wily to tre.tt •them is through the blood, aur( it is ter better to use only harmless vegetah,e compounds than to dose to t-ecess with quinine, calomel and other drugs. By treating the blood,. with iiuua's Sarsa- parilla, slrofu In, salt rheum and whet tare cuminenly called "humors;" dys 'ep- sia,,. catarrh, rheumatism, neu,il gid, cousbfapt•iun and other trouuses t:.at originate in impurities of the blood or irp;rir(-d circulation, can all be cured. Alban]. Dead. himself valuable if not invaluable to 1i1 employer. 'r'41 i'.>kS.4DIA :1l)XG'TRF.5S DIES I\ A youngroan who, by the proper PARIS, 1150 of his spate moments, , increases his efficiency as a clerk, salesman or The celebrated chanteuse, ?,,,aIle, mechanic, will have all . increased died in Paris, lately. financial value to the individual who • Emma Miami,- whose real nater(' is employs him, and will, sooner or lat- La .;eUlleSSe, WOO a native l.f :.:1l1tlda,.) er, be the recipient of special favor leaving been bore near Montreal 111 and financial ean5ideratiOn. 1817, :elle Wilii a descendant of The beat way to secure prompt French Settlers. At ;r comparatively promotion to a larger position than early- age bee education was began you 00011p3'. at the Convent of the Sacre Coeur at Always do more than your agree - Montreal. Later 5110 trent to Europe ment ealls for and know more than for her mllsecial I.1aeatiou. ' She your position demands. studied in Paris under Duprey all(,HoeeoWAS'sOINTMENT ANDI'II.L,: affected and the show proceeded. a4.-lfilan under the old Maestro Lamperti. Her debut was made at disease of the skin?—No case of I was attaoked severely last winter Albany whence she took her name. ase of the skin, be its nature with Diarrhoea, Cramps and Colic and In 1870 she appeared at Messina with what it fluty, has haled to be bene- thought 1 was goingtodiel but fortuu- suecess also at Malta and at La fited when these patent remedies have atoly I tried Dr. Pow:er s ExtraetT of t Wild Strawberry, and now I can thitnI THE X� TN(*HAM 'I" I I4.t i„ JULY ,5 'O. i''�94, Malting Folks Happy There was only two of 115 ill the stagecoach, :llt(1 though 1 had asked I,1,\ ('(1111pit11iU11 no. questions .I pretty well knew that iv was 11. prospector; We had left the station only two 181105 behind when we were stopped by a petrel and a woman standing lnin(l ill band in the road, The man was all of u/) and lame in both legs treed the normal was at least 51) an(, hall lust an eye and most of her teeth. ,. stopped couple 1 ' ,�, ) , l •111 ecu ld earn As the stage , tc 1 p c r } forward and the lain asked.; "Ar' either of you 111 that' a preaell• es." "What's wanted? asked. my com- panion as lie got dowel. "Want to be spliced." "Do you love this woman, sir—do you love her with a love which all ,.. great I Ocean ofthe 1 Oat aCIfIC " ±tl utnl the at cordal not (,uncle ? "As nigh as I can figger it out I (10.•" "An you woman, will your love for this 111a11 continue to the brink of the grave and beyond. "Well I sartainly dote on Sam," she cheerfully replied. "What property have you got ?" wits asked the bridegroom. "Ten acres of hand; a horse and a dugout. "And you, madam`?" "Ten acres of land, a cow and a sodhouse." "And you both love ?" "We do." "..�1l right. Stand over there. Clasp elands. Now, then Sam, if you don't wise this woman right, I'll suint you up and make. your head crack and woman if you don't do your level best to make Sam happy I'll divorce you and forbid you to marry again. No kissing the brfde, and nothing to pay.. Dig out for your dugouts and be happy But•you are not a preacher ! I said to Nieman as the stage rolled. on with us again. "0f coutrse'not." "Then why—why —" "To make 'cut happy, of course. That's about the fifteenth couple I've married within two years, andel expect- to marry about fifteen more." "But—. • "No buts about it. When a man can make two of his fellows beings happy by jumping out of a stage and joining theta in the boly bonds of wedlock, then he's a blame mean critter to hold back on it !" At no time is man. secure from attacks of such painful and dangerous disorders of the stomach as Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Cramps, Diarrhoea, and Dysentery -but these complaints are particularly common during the heated term, when it is doubly dan- gerous to• neglect 'them. PERRL DAVIS' PAIN KILLER is a remedy that has Bever failed when tried, and the severest attacks have been cured by it. It leaves no evil:. effects, and invariably brings relief to the suf- ferer. Every reputable druggist in .the country sells Pitruw DAVIS' PAIN KILLER. Large size New bot- tle, price 25c. There was 11 i exciting scene at Goc1erich Thursday when it became known that Cook & Whitby's circus had pitehdd its tents on the Agricul- tural Park, which is the town's re- creation grounds. About a mantle ago Mayor Butler closed a contract granting the privilege of pitching the tents on the park, and that after- wards a new contract was macre by the corporation in: which this privi- lege was withdrawn. A .special meeting of the council was called to take action„ After lengthy confer- ence an amicable settlement was Pergola, Florence. She first sang in been properly applied. In scrofulous this. excellent remedy for paving my life..., ' olid scorbutic affections they are Mrs. S. 'Kellett, Minden, Ont.Nvitcl(-orettt. at the Italian Opera in 1872 where , she continued a favorite. Her most especially serviceable. Scurvy and r Strange as it may seen; to sonde, t successful roles were 'Amina' 'Mar- eruptions, which had resisted • all Mr. (1 , R. Meredith, Toronto city ingredients of the witches cauldron i t "Macbeth," at least a part of then; guerite,' Mignon' and '0phelia' in 1 other modes of treatment and ,''rade.- counsel, say's the police of the city 'were Once standard remedies MUM '} j1=LLiGAT OF4S. Tt letif beelieeet her 1•anlUlnrIty with the i,'seu':l1es Is Demeerorts, Co.. Sta•,etoi;. sa F1oril:tan, told the zoo• logical re ,•r=t•_ _', tI •> 1i 116111 glt4i Star a gots, alligator story. 1)I1e 1i the Colo. nee lhau(ts was ons:'iUg, twill knowing the section from which he nailed, the reporter lnttn)'a11�• expected to • get a first-class w:u story. Bat 11e Chiba. The Maud was not lost i11 the fratricidal struggle. , It `.Pats the work of au alliga- tor, or,. as they call them in the laud where the reptile builds its nest and rears its young, w 'gnitor. "'Lyell, it happened a long time ago," said Col. Streeter, "and f 1 had not told the story so often 1 think I should (love forgotten it When I was a young fellow, chnckfid of dazzling dreams and 'ambitious schemes.. • I used to hunt 'gators for 11 living. The (ride of one of these brutes is worth all the way front one to )our dollars, =lording, to size; condition Land age. I had a big. fiat -bottomed b 1a f,oit of compromise boat, ac i e between bateau end a sand -scow, and ettt a tett 111 h s 1 soo , I1150(1 toCYUise at night on a lake not far out of Tampa, One dark night I shoved off, After I had reached the most alligatorial part of the lake I lit a fire on one end of the boat. These crafts are arranged especially.for this. so there isn't 1itic11 danger of the whole thing going up. in smoke, Well, whet, my rosin knots began to blaze and spatter and sizzle as rosin knots will, it wasn't long before a big 'gator raised his head out of the lake to see what the illumine, tion meant. To a newcomer there isn't any more horrible sight this side of the other world than a great, long 'gator lying close to you and grinning at yon With his rip -saw ivories under the weird glare of pine knots, But I didn't think of this, for I was all 011e hand at the business. Bang 1 and a Sharpe gun re- lieved that 'gator of all earthly care and trouble. I haulediiim hi and stretched him out in the bottom of my boat. It was a good night for the sport, and the 'gators seemed to be especially^ inquisi. tive as to the Meaning of that fitful light. That trusty rifle spoke again tied aglain, and one by one I landud tlie yic- tiuls in the old boat. The last one came to the top pretty close to daybreak. He was a savage -looking old-timer. He was what with propriety we ;night call n hard shell 'gator. Ho looked at use in caVEATS,TRADE MRRKs COPYRIGHTS. CAN 1 OBTAIN A r'ATENT 1 For lr PAprompt Gnawer {end an honest opintott, write •to. T & tell„ who have bad nearly afty yearn' 8xperlence in the patent Mutineers. Coinmuatlea. done strictly confidential. A liana hoolc of In- formation concerning Patents and Low to ob- tain them sent free. Also a catalogue of nmehan. heal and 8010110110 books rent free. Patents takou throngs Munn b Co, receive spPecial notice in hot eie,(tificAnarrlean.and thus are brought widely betore$he public with- out cc to the inventor. d splendid n t ue dd a e r lesue d ~sake elegantly P , Y.1 t d it nett a has far a a to largestcirculation of an i e0 scientific work world. (83 a year. Sample copiessenree the Building Edition. monthly, 560 a year, Single copies, 95 cents, Every number contains beau- tiful plates, in colors, and photographs Of ne)Y hooses. with plans, enabling builders to show the latest „a 0., Now secure 3Q 1 1 aoADWAY. --------------- THI'. Clevelan i11 the �4 B B a �vE macre IN THE We are the Sole Agents hi Win ham. Call and see them. an its tltisg s :rt o. w ty, ald I resented J. d' CLINE Ot Itis impertinence. I brought hint into the boat. There is jinn, where I made • 1uv mistake. That alligator wasn't -all • \Vini;bam. the way (lead. He seemed to have' lots 1 - .- •-_-•----_.__ ._ ___._-- of energy stored nil somewhere. •uitl he turned on 1110. We 1141(1 tt fight right Il 1 f t there in the boat. Before I could pump s some pills into hint he had me. What a ''� ��� tvrestling match it was! I oting man, I y -r - . -•- - that's wrist's the matter with the end of �w - - 5-' � ' - that arm.” 1 rsn al ytlln0llalil ophine Sfreo b Ont. Origin of the story of Creation. ' „ 1 Ina summary which in its profound I J. A. liatintD, J. W. scour, them lit and fearless•intogrity does honor • Mount Forest.' I Listowel. not only to himself hilt t0 tine great po. Deposits which he holds, the Rev. Dr. Deposits Received and Interest - Driver, royal professor of Hebrew and 1 allowed. Canon of Christ Church at Oxford, has I , • recently stated the• case fully and fairly. 1 Money Advanced to Farmers and Having pointed out the fttct that the I Easiness Men, Hebrews were ono people oitt of many - who thought rpoli the origin of the unl I Ou long or short time, "Au endorsed notes verge', he says that they :'fronted theories, or collateral security. Saale notes bought to account for thebeg'inningof the earth at a fair valuation. Money remitted to all and roan;" that "they either did this fez parts of Canada of reasonable chargest. themselves or borrowed those of their I Special Attention Given to Col - neighbors;" that "of the theories cur-! P rent in Assyria and Phmniuia fragments 1 letting 4.ocotints and r otos. have been preserved, rind these exhibit I . points of resemblance with filo biblical I p narrative sufficient nt to warrant the in.) ,igc;rt8 in Canada -'ilio Merchants' Sault femme that both are derived from the ' of Canada statue cycle of trlldition. After giving seine extracts from the weep I•toure-From ii'a. m. to 5 p. nt. Chaldean creation tablets, he . saws: i • ST= BLOCK, "In the light of thtae facts it is diffi- cult to resist the. conclusion that the biblical narrative • is drawn from A. E. SMITH, • •Agent. the satno source as these other re• cords. The biblical niStoriano. it is ZETLAND SAW MILL plain, derived their neutered from the r r MILL best human sources available. e. *• The materials, which with Other nations GEORGE E C SC. proprietor. were combined into the crudest physical theories or associated with a grotesque )polytheism. were vivified ' and trans; ' formed by the • inspired genius of the Lumber of ail kinds, Hebrew historians, and adapted to bo. come theyehiclo of profound religious - First-class Shingles, truth." . Not less honorable to the sister ani• versity and to himself is the statement recently made by the Rev. Prof. Ryle, Halseau professor 6f divinity at Cam: v bridge He.says that to siippeso that a WOOD delivered to any fart of Wing - Christian "must either renounce his loam. confidence in the achievements of scion. tific research or- abandon his faith in scripture is a monstrous perversion of Christian freedom." He declares: "The old position is no longer tenable; a new position has to bo taken tip at once, prayerfully chosen, and hopefully held." �e thou .., on to prepare the Hebrew goat;p Ib story of creation with the earlier stories developed anion"• kindred peoples, and especially with the Assyro•Babylonian cosmogony, and shows that they are from the same source.—Andrew D. White, in the Popular Science Monthly. and Cedar Posts. Car Lead Orders a Specialty. the Last of which she made a marked ally become worse front year ±0 year, have the right to prevent the street Europeans. In the tenth and eleventh Iguccess 1` lnndnlatl., In her career have been completely cured by Hol- car tracks being used for the par- centuries a sovereign cure for agne wa her + appearance as'I'. , loway's cooling Ointment and purify- poses of running street cars 011 Sun- the swallowing of a•small toad that ( was a pee Iso rn 1 I, 1 ev been choked to death on St. John's `Lahengrin' in .187,8. She married 1 eng ells, which root out the disease days• and a splendid remedy for rhennatis Mr. Ernest Guy, formerly manager ' from the blood itself and leave the ,:laving' suffered over two its, was to fasten the bands of clothing wit 1 o nu ars not oars taint. In the 'nursery Holloway's helped me, I concluded to try Burdook f°f eitl'terla toad or a frog, Physician I a.Jt'urders by mail promptly attend co G1:JrIGE TIIOMSON, . Sox 125, Wiu;;ham P. 0 VVINGHAM SAYtMI LLS The uudersigned in returning thanks for oast fa vors,beg leave to say that they bnve a very large stook of hn LUMBER, SHINGLES, LATH, ' . BARRELS, WOOD, &a., s on hattd, which will bo sold at very close had prices to meet the requirements of the e,1 hard times. a First 'Class Shingles, $ A ,1O per• natettav,t frequently recommended the water from a toad's brain for mental affections, And that a live toad be rubbed over the die- eased nart,s,.ss 0.cure for the anhaa1r. ,t Voting Looking ltrincesn. The youngest lookin elderly princesr;r of the Italian Opera in London constitution free from every marl sears w )ill constipation and the doctors h pins that had '�!��wl):. tiles --IS PWnLISIIEO T 4. ll1'I.ltl. I I'"IDAY MQ11\1N(* ' —.t'1' T11E— TiMI=S OFFICE', JO EPHINk, STREET' WINUILAM, ONTAWO„ Subscription price, vk lacy year, In atf1veneftt • ADVI;LITISIS(l KA'rl±S: .epaou 1 1yr. 1 ulno• 1 t n,0, 11,n Onu Oolumn 800 00 1190 00 ieee Oa q0trait"4000re001200oa,„ e ,na•u •0 0 0t,ci � 0 1- .s o0a, I a fr' 1r e [nr. , „„ h F 0_( i a •• uo 2 00 i ao. i Legal and other, c:wnal adrertisemcuts, Inc per line for 41115± lusortitn,, and 8:.perlinolurealh subsequent hlsortion. Loo•al noticos 10e. pe. line for that iraertlon1 and 5c. per line for each enbey(ttuent'neertle,, No local alae. wilt lee t•ltarlxed lona t1ml':5c. AdvcrtlsomentsotI.ost,l'bund,Straycd Situations, and Business Chances Wanted, not exceeding 0 nue. nonpareil, S1 per month Douses mini Venue for Salo, not exceeding 8 51 for that mouth, 50e, per subsequent month Theeo terms will be strictly adhered to Special rates for local advertisements, or '141 longer periods. Advertisetnonte and local notices withoutspeel le directions, will be inserted till forbid and charged accordingly. Tranvitory ldvo1•tiecnueats must be, paid fu advance Ubangca for contraetad=•ertfttments Must be tr the olllou by iVodnesday= aeon, in order to appees that week , 11, ELLIOTT• 1'a0ratl00a Axe Pomona* Y ►It MACDONALD, dJ CENTRE STREET;. WIxtmeat, • • �.-.-- ONTA1110,: [AT.,B, TOWLER, Y�•�i Member College Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario • --Coroner for County of Huron— Office Up -stairs, next to Mr Norton's 'office, Wing. haat, Ont. Oryics II ores. -0 Lo 12 a. In., 1 to p. nt„ et at Residence, Diagonal Street. T P. KENNEDY, 1i1. D., M. C. P.S O. t (Successor to Dr, J. A. Meldrum,) O'Jd :liedaltat of Western University: Late House, durireon in Louden General J-tosuital. Ppuoial utten• tion paid to diseases of womoo and children. Office—Formed; occupied by Dr,',1Joldrum,Corner of Centro ora) ['strict streets. tj• Ixetl A61 0147 Tj: tANSTONE, 1L • BARRISTER, SULIcITelh, Etc., Private and Company funds to loon at lowest rate intereet.' No oomntisslo11 charged. Mortgages, town. and !arm propert) bought and sold OFFICE—Beaver Block Wlxotun J. A. MORTON BARRISTER, &c , 11 inghau, Out E. L. DICKINSON, Barrister Etc. swam/on TO DA.1'.Ir, OF i1A11In.TON. MONEY LOA.,. Office—Meyer Block, Wiu4ham. TO E'ITISTRY._.J.S.JEitOME, L. D. S.,t:•irofj85. p+'q ��'al r="k7 Is manufacturing f}rst•class stets of in theteeth a Dominion they T eth extr cted {•s �1i1(t absolutely witnout pain, by his new process, guaranteed perle. tly safe. (FFICE 1n the Beaver Block, opposite the Brunswick House. • Wm. H. Macdonald, L. D..S., DENTIST. OFFICE, MACDONALD'S BLOCK. ' Will visit Gerrie lst and 3rd Mondays of each month. JOHN RITCHIE, C!, GENERAL £sstmAsc:F AGENT WiYOIIAN, •ONTARIO: p DEANS, JR., Wa en.t ,, LICENSED AUCTIONEER FOR TEE COUNTY or HURON. Moderate,Salesttended in any part of the Co. Charges. JOX N CU1tItIL, MOHAIR, ONT.?, LICENSED AUCTIONEER EAR. TUE COUNTIES OF HURON AND 1)1( C •' u L. All orders loft at the TIanta office promptly attend ed to. Terms reasonable. "('ADIEs HENDEIISON, - tLJ1045eItn Aucrto1x n roIt Comings 2IVRoU AND' Bnvcs. All sales attended to promptly and on the Shortdee Notice. u Charges Idederate and 8atlsfact(ou 0unranteed.l ,All necessary arrangements 1811 be made at the Ttales' Mee WaxoltAtf ' Oi,•r Dei, J.14LCASrt, SI. 17. Toronto, llfeinber College Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario, been stuck into the See Square. _. d Mots. per delivered, 1rVoo p , Ointment should 1,e ever at hand ; -Blood Bitters, and before t used rine bottle A Bot n to iorsemen.•--One bottle tt e I was cured. I can also recotn- •,.ac1 English Spavin Liniment completely it will „eve c'051', •i11 s1)ralelt3, coati 'Ms Mena it. for back headache. Ethel i), ;fr(anr raved a curb from my' horse, I take burns, scald;$, and infantile 'eruptions•1.Haines, Lakeview, Ont. - P:ea stare in recommending the remedy, and may always safely be applied bv ' , Tucker, r _-nerd it acts with mysterious promptness 1n any ordinary attendant. 1 ' % nt. i ucker, a Toronto bttteli:'r, taw removal from Iloilo; of bard, soft ori tis years old died in his shop' on 9'ues- 1 1ios � lumps, blood spavin, splints, It is enlportan't to keep the livr and clay morning froth the effects of in. „and sprains. iF i nv stifles ( o. kidneys 'e fid. . $wee, tlin good n 1 nn ptl twigHood's Sar- dating- as. The coroner said death Partner. Markham, Ont, Sold at eaparilla is this remedy for invigorating g (Jltli'r I)r,,gA(illC', t1'iughaln. these organs. was feei(1e11tal. 1J,vorything else:equally low, Clinic and in Europe is Princess Sagan (of the Talh se11• us before buying, as we will not be leyratt I branch), who, although the hal;tradertdold, teaohed the years of grsndnrothex 004 ;y;rcD .'gN SON.ees, and, what is! mol;, lt)oltil like , women of from 90 to 3I, j 11 ingllalt t, Jane /tit, 1809. • • 1' ok1AR10 Money to tan cin Notes. Notes Discounted It,EASOlr1'A$l,t RATES money advanced on laortgages at Si pot cent with privilege of paying at the oral of any year, Note:, and mounts collected, A0101`, tteI1niee. Beateri3leek Wili'glism,Cnt. - • 1•A HIGH am BRAHMIN GIVES U,a AN INTERESTING PEEP INTO HIS RELIGION. 0.o Oldest of t1ro Or'eat Living Religious .--Some of Its manifold Aspects -Its • "Central Doctrine ass Tlaugilt in A11 Ito ;• Maher 'Works. • (The writer is oneof the fixer High ;Caste Brahmins who have ever been in the country, and the following is the ;first article written by hila for a Cana• dean newspaper, He is professor of ' mathematics at .&llahabad (college, Al- - lahabad, India, and carne As a delegate :to the Theosophical Convention held at . 'the Parliament of Religions at the • World's Fair. He appeared in Toronto ant. • ue byMrs, Annie Bos at a leets) S ih oft and teri rl 8e\' ser • rel: aV vi' the at liri ppr. hi' tis ht' • Brahmanism is decidedly the very el, oldest of the living religions of to -day, tri and it often does strike ale as strange r(. . that this ancient religion, which might si. be as old as the world itself for aught WI - that historical research can tell us, d. should for age after age have stood the s work of tune and decay, while religions ni = ; much younger should have been com- r pletely disintegrated and shgulcl have , ti , disappeared without even lbaving a 1 trace behind. Under the above eiroum- I el ' stances. it may bo interesting to people I even in the 'West to get a momentary 1 1; glimpse of some one of its manifold as- t: pelts—all of which are now seen in India, '•, 4 , not in the beauty of shining youth, but :! distorted and deeply furrowed with age. i To the superficial observer of this grand and transcendental religion, the existence } of the so-called idolatry among the peo- ple of India is what the red rag is to the '•Lalli, and he does not pause to think if . ^ there may be, underneath. the crust of what he considers "silly superstitions,” 1 the great rock of Truth, which alone could withstand for centuries the inces- sant battering of the waves of destr, ci- 1 tion from outside. One single fac±is . enough to dispel the delusion that : Bralnninism and "debasing idolatry” • mean the shine thing. Brahmanisin, as is now well known in the West, thanks to the labors and researches of European scholars, is essentially pantheistic. It . believes that all that exists, from the minutest atom—commonly regarded by the iehotant as dead—to roan, the think- �1 ing and reasoning being, is permeated • • by the great Spirit from which, accord- ' •ing to its conceptions, all things pro - need and.into which they finally return: '. The universe, both seen and unseen, both aminate and inanimate, both ra-, tonal and irrational, is but a man;- festation - of the Great Divine Ono, which ' liveth 'from chaos to cosmos and . from, cosmos . to chaos, pure, undecaying, and ' un- dying; and the universe 1s therefore 111; Onei 1401100 ebextensive with God 'and . is God. To any thinking mind it will be evident on a moment's reflection that "idolatry" can have no place in a sys- tem of religion which starts from which all other troths follow. How can a re- ligion which in every: page and every line of its sacred \}'things teaches the One-ness, the All pervading and the In- finite nature of the Spirit, in the same breath inculcate on its followers the be. lief that God can reside in' an isolated, portion of matter, is a question which people who run away with the idea that Bralnmanisin is synonymous with heath enism would do well to answer. Frolr • the very earliest dawn of Brahmanic bi •bhography down to its dim evening, tin one idea that has always been kept ix illusive natur ',ephemeral front and never lost sight of is th• l: ande of matter . which is technically called Maya in it philosophical systems. In all the tranf .cendeutal and mystical works, in all tb Metaphysical and • even scientific wri', ings, in all the allegories and fables, an in all the talk and traditions of the grey Hindu race, the one characteristic whic gives calor to them all, and different .rtes them from similar •works ar 'institutions of other nations, is tl ever-present , idea that spirit the only reality of the universe in that matter in all shape and form. in 1 .its plisses of evolution,, is ail illusii given rise to by the thought of t Deville Spirit, and will finally vani into its bosom, just as a bubble .rise., on the breast of the mighty ocem How a nation which has imbibed tl 'doctrine from: its mother's milk a grows and is nurtured in this belief c regard a few cubic inches of mat of the lowest type as Divinity is a pr lem to be solved by those. who jump the conclusion that the Hindus .heathens immersed in bat barous sur , stitions, .and need the light of mod, religious and philosophic thought to t them out of their intense darlcnl The fact, however, is that no other tion realises so deeply, so intensely 1 so vividly, as the Hindu the Reality 1 the Eternity of the Spirit, 'because Hindu has inherited this belief. as "result of centuries of thought oa tl lines. And Drahtuanisn insists, ' probably no other religion sloes, ,u forcing matter to take its proper p 'in the economy of nature, and allowing it to assert its ascendell0j ,the sublilner realms by um] ;the throne which really belongs !Spirit. That a reran, constantly re mg the transitory and illusive eharn of all that can be perceived by the :senses, should strive to direct his b ;mind and soul toward that whit Permanent and Undying, is the ice ' of all Brahrllattical 'teachings. So as a person is immersed hi matter • ,pursues vainly the gratification. o ;SenseS, 1158 reason Will be cloudei ;intuition blinded, and his . upward blocked, for net with the dead Weig (materiel 'tendencies can one ;note ;to the T('ri,i.. at. where the light of t ;shines ft,e, .'f r. One of the apho: „ . t On of oily lien a ,1,.lical systettx 9 'Spirit is t oelit cotntized," and l fore he maid footer have > gli ! v(i aw(�gi 'eget$ . Of the