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The Exeter Advocate, 1894-5-3, Page 6WISlrel I VOULD, :!Vii h;t I could go back a little while. e boy again, A. -,%value o' the, niinnere with a tittle. crooked pin; 'N hear the frogs a-gruetln' as X git 'em ea the jump, '11 me eiteoroci Wusser'n they was, when they -hit the water plump.. Wisht I could go loathe' oroat, the ineeder tnmellin' sweet 'el feel the sassy daisies a-bIOklin' 0' my feet, All the whit°, a-noddin' 'n a-smilin' up at Nisht I could go back 'n be like X aster be, Wieh;t l could go t-morrer 'n tiled 'em all the same ;As they was the day I bei' t' make' a bigger name ; 'N see dear old mother-alwaya skeery-at the gate, Like she uster wait for me whenever I was late. Wisht I could look hi heaven 'n ace her there to -day, git a tender smile o' love, like when I went away ; I feel like it ud help me to battle here with sin- Wishit I ,could go back a little while 'n be 8 boy again. THE FANDANGO. It Is the Favorite Spanish Mance and Breathes of Love. All Spaniards, it might be said, are born dancing. Dancing has been pop- ular in all ages and among all nations. Keen the savages use their feet rather than their heads to express their ideas. l3ushmen jump about to imitate calves ; Hottentots go on all fours to imitate the baboon, and execute one movement in which they imitate the buzzing of a swarm of bees. Other savage nations imitate, by means of dancing, hunts after wild animals, and in Tasmania a dance by women describes their hunt after the opossum, diving after shellfish, digging for roots, nursing children, while one very exciting movement describes a quarrel with a husband. Another dance is where, by gesture, they taunt a chief- tain with cowardice, and urge him to come forward to recount his courageous deeds. As I say, the Spanish people seem to be born with their dancing shoes on ; and, as a rule, they are good dancers, because what we love to do we generally do well. The proverb tells us that " A pair of light shoes is not all that is :wanted for dancing." The fandango is the oldest national dance of Spain, especially in the district - of Andalusia. Some say it was intro- duced by the Moors, while others claim it was there before they came to the country. This dance interprets what may Tie called a passionate love song. The ppeniag, or invitation, is a wild bit of Music, accompanied by a boisterous song, which ends in a load chorus el " ah I Ch's 1" It is danced by couples, male and female, in what is called three-four time. The musical accompaniment is a guitar or a tambourine ; sometimes castanets are used to keep time, or the spectators 'make up for the omission .of the latter by clapping their hands. Almost any music will satisfy a Span- iard who has a good opportunity of danc- ing the fandango, for " a willing dancer is easily ,played to." The village people in Andalusia perform the dance on almost every evening of the week and always on Sunday. Some of the brighter sort sometimes improvise verses, consisting of two or four lines and sing while they dance. As I say, the movement is designed to inter- pret lovemaking between a couple. There are coy glances on the part of the wo- n7.an and smiles from the man, aflvan- ces, retreats, feminine coquetries, mascu- line supplications and the eventual triumph of the man. Such a dance affords, of course, large scope for intelligent pantomime and ro- mantic acting. It is so lively and inter- esting that when it is going on even toddling babies may be seen trying to imitate the grown performers. The free extemporaneous character of this dance has led to abuses at times, and the church has sought to suppress it. I have read that a Roman consistory ages ago was about to sign a'prohibition against the fandango, when one of the members suggested that they should have it per- formed before them. The dance was ex- ecuted so well by a party of Spanish youths and maidens that it was not long before the reverend judges themselves came on the floor, and were capering around asr- lives as the original per- formers. Y P g formers. There are no violent movements in Spanish dancing. Its beauty lies not so much in complicated steps as in a graceful swaying of the body and arms. In some dances the performers do not seem to lift their feet from the ground, and remain in one spot until tiie dance is concluded. At the end of the figure, when the ,music comes to a sudden stop, the two dancers strike ' a graceful attitude, as is the custom with the premier danseuse in a ballet. The art of stopping gracefully is the principal test applied to a dancer. Nearly all dancing is accomplished by singing -sometimes an impromptu mel- ody, but more often some song handed down for generation, in which all can take part. These songs, or ballads, are especially designed to serve as an accom- paniment to dancing. The ballads sung on -these occasions are very simple, and always have love for their theme. LORD ROSSE'S MAMMOTH REFLECTOR The massive six-foot reflector in the Lord Rosso telescope at Parsontown, Ire- land, is justly considered one of the modern wonders of the world: The gigantic reflector, the, -first that ever solved the problem al the nebula of Orion, is set in the end of a fifty -five-foot ;Wooden tube, held together by iron bands. Although it weighs a fraction over four tons it is so sensitive that the pressure of the hand upon the back will produce !distortion in the reflected image of a )star. Compared with the human eye this monster reflector is as 130,000 to 1; it has penetrating power of 500, and can reveal stars so remote frdm our earth that it would require '"60,000 years for the light to reach us, and yet light travels at the unthinkable speed of 192,- 500 miles per second. THE HOLES IN BUREINS' HAT. Johnny had been inspecting the visi- tor's derby hat, and listening to the visitor's conversation. What he thought of the latter Was shown by his question "Say, Mr. Burkine, are those holes in your hat for ventilation or conversa- tion 7" COULDN'T SAY DEFINITELYr " Do you lake this man for better or for worse Y" asked the minister. "t can't tell until I have had him for a little while," returned the bride., Representative Vanvoorhis, of Ohio, has introduced in the United States (House a Bill for the survey of a ship canal route eonnectieg Lake Erie and the Ohio sliver by' way of the 'Ohio Canai and Muskingum River. It is to have suf- fieient depth to transport the largest boats of the great iakee. WEDDINGS IN BRAZIL, Evelyth ng White and, Bright an. Gladsome. WHERE BABIES ARE POPULAR. A Won41O0a1 Sculpture of Deity Crowning "the Virgin-ttsaracter of the .'People- Faut9iq 3;ire-ifeuoaj Brides and Fat Matrons. Not far from our hotel is a fashionable sanctuary, to which the aristocracy of Rio de Janeiro go to get married. The church itself, though shabby, bare raid Unimposing, is interesting, because of its singularity, It is surrounded by a bloom- ing garden of the most gorgeous flowers that grow in the tropics, and the dim and inoldy interior is always brightened by the garlaude anis bouquets and orange blossoms wbieh happy brides have left as votive offerings upon its altars. It is approached by a fine flight of steps, upon which strangers always pause spell- bound with astonishment before the re- markable relief on the pediment that meets their gaze. It represents a scene In heaven, in which God, seated on a throne, is leaning forward to place a ehaplet of roses upon the Virgin's head, who kneels before Him, while saints, and angels stand around in bare -legged groups and puffy -checked cherubim fill up the spaces. Having heard of this celebrated work of art, which was ex- ecuted in Portugal a century ago, I went over to see it, being curious to know in what form the daring artist would venture to portray THE SUPREME BEING. He is represented as a very large man, with pointed beard and hair carefully parted in the middle, wrapped in a gar- ment resembling a bath gown, with san- dals upon His feet ; and I noticed with interest that the coat of arms 'of the Imperial House of D. Joao ornamented His high-backed chair, and that an old sword of the well-known 'Damascus make lay across His lap -a fine adver- tisement for the dealers in those blades. The Virgin was !originally gowned in sky-blue, with a mantle of pink and yel- low, but the colors are now almost in- distinguishable, and the rest of the heavenly company wear little but smile of the utmeet complaisancy Whenever we see a number of carria- ges lined with white and drawn by white horses, ekurrying around the cor- ner, we know it to be a wedding in the neighboring church ; and sometimes we invite ourselves over to witness the cere- mony, for not only is it customary for passers-by to drop in on sueh occasions in a friendly and informal manner, but the larger the impromptu gathering the greater compliment it is considered to the contracting parties, and the better pleased are all concerned. In Brazil all marriage ceremonies are performed in church, and the local etiquette of Rio de Janeiro prescribes that all who can afford it shall hie thereto in the white lined carriages that are kept expressly for that purpose. There are NEPER ANY BRIDESMAIDS, nor pretty processions ending in artistie grouping around the -altar, such as we are accustomed to see elsewhere, 'but the whole pasty, unbidden strangers and all, clusters hap -hazard as near to the chancel rail as they can crowd, to see the knot securely tied. The bride is always dressed in white, and wears a veil top- ped by a wreath of brange-blossoms and carries a rosary and prayer -book, and her female relatives come bareheaded and in their best gowns. As in other Catholic countries, the beautiful custom- prevails of handing down from generation to gen- eration for weddings and confirmations, the same rich veil that served an early ancestress in those important epochs of her life ; and naturally, the yellower it grows with age the more sacred it be- comes, in memory of the brides grown gray and turned to dust. Instead of the conventional pretty young brides- maids and maid of honor, the Brazilian bride is supported through the ceremony by an elderly married friend, whom she asks to take charge of her as one hav- ing had experience in the trying ordeal of Hymen's altar. As soon as the priest has read his say,the finalis a grand I kissing time all around, in which the men kiss the groom, the women kiss the bride, and then they fall to and kiss one another indiscriminately with a gusto that is contagions, all chattering mean- while like magpies. PLENTY OF BABIES. Brazilian'; girls marry very young, the brides averaging in age between 12 and 16 years. In this sun -kissed region, where everything attains precocious ma- turity, an unmarried woman df 20 is quite an old maid, and at 25 she is passe and, metaphorically, laid on the shelf. That most unfortunate of crea- tures, a childless wife,' is unknown here, but a round baker's dozen of babies is the rule and 15 not an unusual number, and I know one proud mother who re- joices in the possession of 21 living children, including only three pairs of twins. Of eourae, climate is largely re- sponsible for this extraordinary prolific- ness, and perhaps the fact that child- bearing is considered the most enviable and honorable occupation in. Which a wife can possibly engage, and that she passes her life in her house and garden without much social diversion, has some- thing to do with it. Twenty-five years ago when the husband left his home in the morning to go to business he loeked the gate of his casa and took the key with him, leaving his wife virtually a prisoner, though a willing one ; and to this day many of them, when they go for a few days' trip into the country, take their wives to the great convent that stands near the public gardens and leave them in charge of the nuns until their return. Each man takes a receipt for his wife, as if she were a valuable package of goods, and when he gets back he has only to give up the receipts and claim his property. BETROTHALS. But in this latter part of the nine- teenth century things have been gradu- ally changing for the better, even in Brazil, so far as treatment of women is concerned. They begin to marry a little older, and thus have a chance to acquire bhe beginnings of an education before assuming the responsibilities of mother- hood. Being allowed .a little more lib- erty, they begin correspondingly better ; and being better fitted to bo cohipa'hions for their husbands, tho latter are more inclined to respect the marital vows to which they demand such rigid faithful - noses from the weaker partners in the compact. Though th time is ,passed when women are caged like lunatics be- hind latticed gates and barred windows, and exhibited only at balls and on state. - occasions, under the watchful eyes of their keeper, true social reform is hardly mare accorded to them than It was a century ago. The custom of be- trothing babies in their cradles has gone by, bub the Woman has yet very little eboiee in her own dieposSl., Before Mar- riage her fate rests with her father or guardian, her mother haying almost nothing to say about it t and afterward her husband isas ranch her master as is the Sultan of the ladies of his harem. Therefore, it is not surprising that " saefety " in Rio de Janeiro is in a chaotic condition, to say the best of it, and the wisest thing that a visiting for- eigner can do is to keep her eyes and ears shut and ask no questions as to what appears puzzling in the dualty of domes- tfc arrangements. The conditions that exist here are exactly what might be expected in a community where mar- riage is regarded, as a matter of con- veeienoe only, whore a woman is but a grown-up child. to be closely kept in loading'. -strings, and where the mothersof men are still restricted by the same absurd old rules that came down from the dark ages. No man will be faithful forever in his heart to an inferior; no woman, restricted, but will sigh for her freedom -and who can blame either? BRIGHT SIDE OF FAMILY LIFE. But family life in Braiil has a very bright side, too. It is the same that one sees among all Latin peoples ; the deep affection that is too frequently wanting between husband and wife is lavished upon the children; and then when the boys and girls are grown, the debt is repaid ten -fold with dutiful care and loving attention. One can forgive a Brazilian his shortcomings when one sees his pride and joy in the white- haired father and the reverend tender- ness with which ho treats his mother. Careful, loving hands guide the tottering grandfather to his seat in the evening sunshine; quick, youthful feet are really for his every want, and then the younger children come in for his blessings and kiss Ms hand, and the stranger within the gate is brought forward to pay re- spects to him, as ho sits in his halo of patriarchal glory. In the best families of Brazil the ancient Portuguese custom still prevails of bidding one another " boa noite " (literally " good night ") when evening comes. They may be sit- ting at dinner or entertaining guests in the salon, and on the candles being lighted as a reminder that` evening has come, the members of the family turn to one another and exchange this salu- tation, and the children arise and kiss the hands of their parents. In addres- sing the father at night or morning, or when meeting after an absence, the chil- dren say "a bencao men pai"-your blessing, father -and after they are grown-up and gray-haired themselves they continue the patriarchal and relig- ious usage of having the blessing and kissing 'the parent's hand so long au he lives, FAT VS. LEAN. The type of countenance is Latin ; com- plexion dark, hair and eyes as near lo jet black as hair and eyes can be; fore- head high, nose prominent, eyes gener- ally large, expressive and amiable. Al- though there are few tall men in Brazil the average stature 'is below that of the Anglo-Saxon. Ladies are almost certain to develop excessive fat at mid- dle age, and the men to grow leaner with advancing years; and so ponderous wives and puny husbands are seen jog- ging together down the sunset slope of life as universally as in France. Female beauty is by no means as common here as in most parts of South America, and the admixture of African blood, evinced in thick lips, flattened noses and pinkish eyeballs, is often painfully apparent in the highest walks of life. But nowhere in the world is there any such prejudice against " color " as in the free -and - equal United States, and certainly not a, bit of it exists in Rio. The bejewelled wife of a wealthy nabob, whose feet are on the highest round of the society lad- der, and who rides in a carriage on which a coat of arms is emblazoned, has decidedly kinky hair and complexion 'the hue of a well -smoked ham. Fannie B. Ward. Wide Awake Soap is a solid bar of pure soap that will not vanish like snow in hot water. Try it. 380,000 Dines In Sixseen Years. The London Chronicle's Paris corres- pondent telegraphs. that Prince Constan- tine Wiasemsky, the distinguished tra- veller, is making a lengthened stay in that capital. The account which he gave of his travels in Asia and Africa before a recent meeting of the Geographical So- ciety will be followed by a lecture on the same subject in Madame Adam's pri- vate theatre on the 1st of May. Prince Wiasemsky claims to have covered a dis- tance of 880,000 miles during the past sixteen years. He is a tremendous horse- man, and pursues his hobby with a pas- sion which has never diminished since he first began travelling. His next achieve- ment will be a journey across Africa from t]ie extreme north to the extreme south. The Prince, who is forty years of age, is full of vigorous activity, and capable of enduring great fatigue; Kinard's Liniment Cares Gaetrg in Cows. THIS 'COUPON WITH Your name, address and thirty cent's en- closed to no will secure is box of Dr. Howard's Electric Pill. by return Mail; This offer Is open but a short time to introduce the Electric Bills at len than wholesale cost to you: These pills are the best and only perfect Blood Builder and Nerve Restorer: They cure all weakness, restore men and regulati women, develop children: Regular prise, 50e, Dr: Howard Medicine Cokngany.,' Br-oekvUlle, Dull BUT FEW CLOCKS WERE GIVEN. 'An old European custom was to give a clock to anyone who could take an oath that he had strictly Minded his own business and not meddled witb his neighbors' affairs for a year and a day. Kinard's Liniment Cares Colds, etc. RAPID CABLE SERVICE. A firm in Chicago sent a cable mes- sage to Liverpool, asking for a bid on wheat. The answer was received at the same place in four minutes. This ie the quickest time on record. Marriage is never a failure, but a great many married people are. A serious mistake has been discovered in,Presfdent Cleveland's sealing procla- mation, founded on an error in the Act of Congress, which prohibits the capture of seals at all times within a zone of 60 miles around the Pribyloff /elands, in which the word "exclusive" is used instead of " inclusive " of territorial waters. Many years ago. in Scotland, oapital pun-. fehment was by drowning. The first United. States census, taken in 1790, gives the value of real estate at $479,000,000; of houses and personal property at $141,000,000. Tog curette" AS claatlwal lw. How the Mongolians terve " Sarprtse Delicacies sit Their ltaugllets. '" I once attended a ewoll Chiueee ban- quet, and was not a little surprised at the way in which some of the delicaeies were served," said Walter F. Logan, of Sacramento, Cal., at the Laclede last night. ",sifter we had discussed the more 'substantial portion of the repast and dessert was being served, oranges were placed before each guest, the skins of which bad apparently not been broken, yet from which -the pulp had in some mysterious manner been removed and four or five different kinds of jelly substituted in its place. The guests ex- pressed a good deal of astonishment as to how such au operatiou had been ac- complished, but their amazement was only increased when a dish of eggs, the shells of which appeared to be perfectly whole, was placed upon the table. Ex- amination showed the contents of the eggs had been removed and the shells fillocl with nuts and candy. Our host smilingly refused to 'toll us how such. wonderful results had been accomplish- ed and we left the house completely myetifitrd."-St. Louie Globe Democrat. T11E CZAR AS A MUSHROOMER. Whenever the Czar of Russia leaves his State behind him, and leads once a year a family, life in Denmark, there is scarcely a morning that he does not go Mushrooming, for what true lover of mushrooms cares for the insipid " but- tons " from tin or bottle ? So the burly figure, crowned with a straw hat, and with osier basket slung on a stick across his shoulder, may be seen by, those who get up early enough, traversing the green meadows in quest of the delicious comestible. When a sufficient number is gathered, the " mushroomer " returns to the castle, and the spoils are confided to the chief, who has them prepared im- mediately, as mushrooms should be, by one of the twenty cooks who always accompany Alexander III. Good morning, Mrs Smith ; 1 have just fin- ished my washing, using Wide Awake Soap it is the best soap 1 ever used, it washed so easily, making the clothes far cleaner than I ever had them before and it lasts twiceastongas anyother soap ever used; and lust feel how nice and soft my hands are. OLD JURAL AND THE PATRIOTS. When, during the war, the late Gen- eral Jubal. A. Early was in the Shenan- doah Valley, he was one Sunday, attend- ing a village church. The minister was inclined to make the occasion patriotic, if not heroic, and, with animation, went over the doings of Washington, Sumter, Marion, Jackson ; then, since he must halt somewhere, when he thought he had stirred his hearers to a high pitch of ad- miration, he said : " Now, if we had all these honored men among ns to -day, what would yon do Z" Jubal piped out, with his high-pitched voice : " I'd con- script every, — one of ,'em 1"-Argo- nant. Wide awake people buy Wide Awake Soap because it is the best and cheapest they can get. Try it. Auguste Laurean was guillotined at Dijon, France, yesterday for the murder of his mother, wife and his mistress. A. a parricide, he was led to the guillotine bare-footed, wearing only a white shirt and trousers. Before he was taken from his cell, a black veil was thrown over his head, as a further distinguishing mark parricide. a I say, Tom, my wife got a bar of Wide Awake Soap last week ; she says it is the best she ever used for washing. tried it in my bath on Saturday night and I tell you it beats them all for a toilet soap. You just try it. THE BAYREUTH FESTIVALS: Madame Wagner has resolved not to give any more performances at Bay- reuth for several years after this sum- mer -not, indeed, until she has trained an entirely new company of artists ex- pressly, for these festivals; Wide Awake Soap is a mammoth bar of pure soap. Try it. Electricity has been adopted for towing the canal boats on the summit level of the Canal de Bourgogne, which connects the Seine and the Saone, arousing In its course the divide between the channel and the Mediterranean„ 1linard's Liniment Cures Distemper. MALE COSTUME. Ouida describes the nineteenth century clothing of an Englishman as " the most frightful, grotesque and disgraceful male costume which the world has ever seen." .+ns .nanm»w,yr TAKE EST 2Gcts,, G0ets,god $1..00 Bottle. One MO, a +loser. ' 1Xn mrld on ittiStO, rt Mires knell$+, wile teats beat Ciougle meth e3; 11U1t ?l ry1g , '0. oft eyes tttt.n atneey Spavins, Ringbones, etc, cured by Dick's Blister. Dice & Co., P, 0. Box 482. Montreal. 41 TO VOICE " NOT A" MODERN VUL- GARISM. Tho Speaker describes the use of the! words " to voice" (moaning " to ex- press " or " give voice to ") as .the " hideous jargon of the 'press." A's & matter of fact, it is a revival of the usage sanctioned by Bacon and by Shakespeare. If all " jargon of the press" wore as classical as this, it would not have much to be ashamed of. -West - minder Gazette, The Popularity ularit.. of �. Millard's Liniment. 0, C. RICHARDS & CO.— Ship April 1st 120 Gross Kinard's Liniment, value $2,000.00, and draw as usual. F. J. BARNES, St. John's. SHIP, BUILDING IN GERMANY. During last year 48 steamers were constructed in Germany, with a register tonnage of 57,552, and a collective horse -power of 29,715. Of this num• ber all, except one, were built on Ger- man account. During the year the •num- ber of sailing vessels built was thirteen, with a registered tonnage of 8,922. The total number of vessels, both steam and sail, built in Germany last year was, therefore, 62, with a gross tonnage of 66,474. -Iron and Industries. Kinard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. Eight years ago the body of Solomon Krepps was buried in Taylor's Cemetery, near Brownsville, Pa. It has just been dis- covered that the body has turned to stone. The hair and beard are crisp, like threads of glass. James Parks, farmer and trader, of Tyendinaga, has been fined on complaint of Inspector Johnson $45.70 for having in his possession illegal weighing mach- ines and an illegal measure. eseaseaseeserse nANVAOSERS WANTED FOR ` THEi 1 Farmers' Friend and Account Book,' presenting separate a000nnts for mil farm transactions with ,,early balance sheet, eta, Highly recommended. One agent has already sold nearly 100 oop:es in one county. Send Sas circulars and berms, Wed. BRIGese. Pnhti iht.r Toronto. WANTED EVERY BOY AND GIRL TO send 10c. silver for a solid gold front 18k. initial scarf pin. Only one to each person. Bing Supply House, Truly, Montana. MARRY Uewearaaf4uvrre,aitkr1W0fs a{>M script -lone mailed FR.P.:E. Catalog -at of books, sawn Ms, rubber geode, ora., t0Tra-oaai ctweew. 1I� INB„ 0404114M.Sia TtC�ls �xlslaloa QyfRiat%hr BOTTLED ELECTRICITY for Oatarrh sag Pala, Want mats. Miasmal d7 Ce.0imafnaati,t2 LOST MANHOOD, Nssvovs immures Esselte or Yotr ea. eta, po:dbively and perinaaenb1.11' cared by Lana s Spaciflo Remedy. Prins. Si.00 Ira Box, or Six for P.M. from all IDrug,sissa e7 by Mail. Particulars free. LAN M2DICINT CO., MONTREAL, Cote Yf{YC�a hIE[SLoft''3 6 s up FOR CHILDREN TENTHIMO m For sale by allD.uyrIste. illiCrosRemFv,rik3m, I. . s.. ; "oM1 w The �v. sower has ne , i arca. If second chance. you would et first Ell`..,. `. (..„...?„...... d, be sure and start waif', LA • iii• Pis 2Q. tg kw) tti' i div i,7ar E: 4 `C¢7I'g7 { Perry's Seed Annual for 1SOt�! contains the snal indsutatluee of the latest fawning knee: i- //{///1 edge. Every planter should J// have It.. Sent Ire:). \v.Ferry Co., s. , Windsor, • �Ont. ,. { LLUSTRATEDCATALOGUEFREE METALLICROOFING.(2 ,MANUFACUIRE,-RS`'j`Q RO i+I'i'toy; IRs COUGH : EASY BY;TMrINo Jlby's German Sreast 13alsltrat You Dough easy and soon are cured of cough. IWELAT rztormi SAV iris xr, Mr. J. Howe, Port Elen says try's German Breast Salaam fs the besb cough medicine he has ever used. M . D. F. Smith, Organizer Patrons of Industry, has no hesitation inr. recommend Ing Eby's GerTna* real Balsam, the besb mediclne in existence for Magas and colds. Mr. Ohas, Cameron, Uadecwecd, says he got splendid results fknsn using Eby's Germines Breast Salesera and es commends it highly. Mr. John Reimer, Manager Port Men Brush OP, says l Eby's acres= Ernest Balsam is an indispensable necessity ill Ids household, and recommends lb as a Valuable remedy for Coughs and Oolde. Put up in 26a, and 0055. bobbles. Asks your druggists for it. „o020411412MlS7tfs11M t Z AP,c 1117E2VO9WI i SURE CURE ,Manhood Restored Loss of Manhood, 7Lrni ssion S��pernlatorrhoee Impotency, WeakMemory, ijlcep1e 0io0tb Sexual Weakness and Nervous Debility ttosi• tively cured by Dr. DAY'S VITA TART Oli tI Price, 70$1 1abt, Oat, Solo AAgeat for dress Canada Illeatera' ISSUE NO iS 1894 ![OT= Iiy ,repryfng to MYu$ or Woo. ogitrolgfto kneyltll, p1,eOw **sotto* sitfr These hingo leads to Consumption.. Stop the Cough, healthe Lungg; and strengthen. the S- ,sie with E Scott's yl. ,titip''.r >,tiNk.71TY? ItS, 1 .iMv h v,'1<ttv' the Cream of Cod—liver O and hypophosphites. 1t is palatable and easy on the stomach. Physicians, the World over, endorse its. Don't be deceived by Substitutes: Scott $ Bownc, Belleville. AU Dnrggiate, mer. Aft. FARM FOR SALE. The finest and best situated farm in bagel Township of Sornbra and County of Lanabtaue on the Wake of the Sydenhaua River; lift Keret -100 acres cleared. Fine orotund and trop buildings. Terms easy. Apply to JOHN MCOOY, Hattllitoit, Oast•: , FOR SALE OR TO LEASE, Good 100 acre farm in Raleigh Township, about 4 miles from Chatham, Frame Buildings. Cheap. LONDON LOAN COMPANY London, Ont. The Practical DAiRY,M Box 22, CHATHAM, N. Y. large 16 -page Dairy and Creamery Paper. Sent on Trial 6:4'All who keep Six Months for cows want it: ONLY G7 CENTS It Is worth 81.00 to any dairyman. LADIES, MISS WAUGH'S SQUARE MEASURE I The popular dressmaker's system of cats ting --sent to you post-paid for $1.00 wits$ instruction book. Cut all garments fat all forms. No refitting. CHEAP, SEW PLE, DURABLE, PRACTICAL and easily, learned. Full particulars with mammoth oiresl$ lar sunt free on application to M. I. WAUGH, 106 Bay St. North, Hamilton, Ont., 'a [DEAL" SPRAYING PuriPs are unexcelled. Prices right. Agaabo wanted on unoccupied territory. STEEL WIND-sMMILLS for pumping and power. fiuudreds of delighted customers whawane der how beep did wiohont them. Womaka Iron Pumps. Tanks, etc. BEE -KEEPERS' SUPPLIES -Hives, founda- tion, pedalled sootions, queen base, sntakarw, etc. Cho besb. Prices rights. Write for circulars, bee oatato,(nte and sample copy "Canadian Bee Journal." Mention this paper. GOOLD, SHAPLEY & M BrRccnfordCo. (LIMA POSTAGE STAMPS. ANTED, ALT HINDS OF CANADIAN'' Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince BM - ward Island. British Ootutnbia. NswfoandlantL and United States Postage Stamps used before 1870. Manyot these are valuable and I will pay prompt cash for all sent, if in goad order. Stamps are more acceptable when left on origi- nal letter or cover. Do not cab oft It will par you to look upour old letters. C samps now in ue not wanted. t Old oollaottdma is bought. W. J. Grant, 137 East avenge south. Hamilton, Ont. GANANOQUE DRY EARTHS CLOSET Endorsed by doctors and minntfsbs, BMW liana° should have nuts. Price t18. f. asulfae tared by GAN. Gila& 004 Gananegne, Ont. wANTEn.-A position on a farm er near a set 1000. rest. dense as on ornament, .s1180 pump water, aprinkra lawoa, eaayr water up stairs, out wood, cut reed, ruga dynamo par elaaaries, light purposes, and do a , feat vnrlatp or add <; SUBURBAN ohs. For n wcok l _\, r %/.;. have boon a gl izod•aitOr • completed Aormotor; previous to that was only Stool, Zinc and Aluminum, unalloyed and unmade up. 14y cervices can b0 had verycheap, it taken now, during the slack season. Ap- ply to my parents, the Asa. 111108 Couo'Mw, 12th, 00071. well and Fillmore streets, Chicago. N.n.—I am always at home and steady. Ours ie the largest family of its kind in the world, and never has one of lea gone wrong.. .Wo are niso a most powerful ramtly, with, marvelous ondur• once. Wo lave iron eon stitutions (or rather , Steel ones) but aro very sensitive, being vis ibly affected by a breath of air. We stand high end have groat is loonoo, being able to personae water to run ap hill. In fact, w0 aro superior beings, haw ins been placed by our mentor between thecar.h and heavens. Our Stool has been tried in many a tilt and towers above every. thing everywhere. Wo aro indusL),ousboyond anything over known, since we worn 24 hours a day and more than DEG days in the year. We aro untie• ing in our vigilance —wo stand over you day and night.. Wo aro economical be. gond anything on. the earth or tithe heavens, as wo 1ak into oar systems absolutely nothing loot thin air. Write gulose, w0 aro. going fast. JOBS, Like this whicirds:. light the ere andukl. lnmunserable comforts to any home. me fur- nished at prlceswittorz reach of CML evasel Pine or Gat 8tee1Tanks witlrgrace- ful galvanized( Meet; substructures a ape*. falty.vanlzed stoWefnrol 805e$tlisAnt&. tanks tbat do not IealC and make- mud holes: at loss than vatedetkt ones coat., The m prO1l0S0ato AerrfleotdrtdU0uta. $500 GAS iA Mn1208, fon twrhe lticnbestbythcee.ge . wife, son. or .41 daughter /�" ofaf•r- ;l�Il� mer or user Y of b +� vino C ��. '•' mnl • "• 1 0LWaMlnsaOTwo5tha1I5rbPcneQrca-nIIi- dittoes of camps. tabor' and amarntir. and numbers *01 prizes sand for pm ttoulers to thee. OhAermotoruago.Or` Cotoy, est BabEan1fNcr Lineet, N .Steux, Ciy1Irara, Mtnnoapol,s n01 falx, or eS ria* 'lace, N.14 caw 1 Bo8LelloISu i8yiol ALL ritiw .Churl 2IM ln tt,n 8555(1 br wrl]�{ 1ar8, People, ill this i gth. century that can be had for the money, Everybody G RAN BY are bound to have the best That is why Wears RUBBERS