The Exeter Times, 1887-6-2, Page 3Oeen the windo, iniefrfend, nd)it
eunlight in. God sends it as a pr
blessing front heaven ; but Yea bar
with bliuds and ourteine, m if it were
i s a 0 e y to germs. Thai fact ac-
, counts for the welldinewn purity of the air
et the' in pine fereste. Weth tine fact in mind, it
i
:s evidently the duty ot every householder
it one to 'see that there is e good-sized bed af these
delightful dioinfeeting agents growing in the
our . . .
G y of his dwelluig during the coming
menthe, when the air teen te with germs
" seeking whern they may devour," or, at
M1
they underro in the atmosphere, deeelop I Bennet.
I (mum vroronte's ;mimeo.
ezene, Whit) not only oleetreys foul aims
worst enemy. Throw (men the blind
let it in, I know you always say it wil
your pretty furniture and carpets ; bu
dear friend, the roses it steals from
cape, it will plant ie tee cheeks of
ebildren. A few dollar's will buy a
covering for your floor, whilteall the w
of a Omuta will not put the glow of I
into those pale little cheeks, One o
best inveetinents you eau make, is plan
fresh air and sunshine
The germs of disease that lurk in the most
elegantly-furuished room if kept dark, will
vaansh away before the bright and cheery
suelight.
You plants need a sunny windo
u(re
hear you saying, only the other dl,a'
yo Were going to build a conservatory
can' , le your plants did not get enoug
even *u the aeuth window ; consequ
they were pale ant did not bloom well.
and the wee human bud that God ha
trusted to your cere to train into the s
healthy bloem of womanhood, is palei
what are you going to do about the mat
I would suggest a, large bay-winclow fo
nursery, in addition to the one small
that now serves for light end ventilatiora.
Children instieetively feel that sunlight
is a golden treasure. 1 have often seen a
baby creep across the floor to catch at a sun-
beam that had 8 bolen in through the closed
shutters, and was dancing on the cerpet.
Children love bright things. Make home
.
bright, and they will love it,
There is another kind cif sunshine
need to bring into your home. It is the
shine of smiles. Open the door some d
gloomy day, end look out; your face is s
and inanimate, reflecting the dull sky.
few hours later you look again. The el
has passed, and all the world is flooded
sun m t. Involuntarily, you can smile and
s, and
I fade
t, my
your
your
new
ealto
width To read profitably rneane more than to
the read, only the best bock. It meana to read
ty oi the beat way, and when A man of so inuch
culture as Mr. John Morl t 11 h o
this we may give his words some attention.
!In the course of a recent lecture in London
elr. Morley said:
I will not take up your time by explain-
ing the various mechanical oontmvances and
aide to taweessfurstucljr. They are not to be
despised by those who would extract the
most from 'emelt% Many people think of
knowledge as of money. They would like
it, but cermet face the perseverance and self.
denial that go to the acquisition a it, as
Hew to geed.
w.
that
, be-
ll sun
ently
Yes
s in -
wzeof money. The wise student will do most of
ot:
ter?
r the
on
hie reading with a pen in his hand. Ie with
not shrink from the useful toil of making
abstracts and summaries of what he is read-
ing. Some great men—Gibbon was one and
Daniel 'Webster was another, and the great
Lord Stratford was a third—always before
reading a book made a short, rough analysis
of the questions which they expected to be
answered in it, and the conditions +o be
reticle for their answer, and whither it would
take em, I have sometimes tried that
studied and guarded attention, and I have
ymi never done so without advantage • and I
e„. commend it to you. I need not tell you
ark, that I think that most books worth reading
ober once are worth reading twice, and the Inas-
A terpieces of literature—and this is a very
owl important fact—are worth reading a thou -
with sand times. It is a great mistake to think
because you have read a masterpiece onoe or
twice, or ten times, that you are done wall
it. Because it is a masterpiece you ought to
live with it and make it a part of your
eous daily life. Another practice which I corn -
as. mend to e'en is that of keeping a common -
nu_ place book and transcribing into it all that
le is striking and interesting and suggestive,
aps, or that seem e to lead anywhere. And if you
Lae keep i wisely and well, as Locke has taught
us, you will pUt every entry under a head,
division, and subdivision, whioh is excellent
practice for concentrating your thoughts on
e passage and making you alive to its
real point and significance.
feel happier. .
There is a little poem that says :-
44 Mamma's eyes are baby's skies,"
an it seems very true. If mother is tier
and out of spirits, baby is cross and restle
but if mammals smiling and sunny, the c
dren are almost sure to reflect the smile.
you would have a happy, healthful ho
keep it bright with smiles and mush
They will work wonders.
County Smells.
The city dweller daily washes the g
from his face, and cleans the cinders fr
his eyes, and longs for a breath of the d
cious pure air of the country. His pict
of a rural district includes nothing 1
wholesonae than green fields, sunny sk
and fresh breezes,
laden with the perfume
flovvers ; but at Lllis season of tile year
reality is often a very different picture.
does not require a very long ride in
country district at the present season to
counter many noisome smells. Here i
great field thickly covered over with b
decom aped manure from the barnya.
te
it..
ctisoni e ebe air for half a mile he public road, for conve
aroun
Next we ee a gardner, engaged in mak
his cold flames, which he places atthe au
mit of a large heap of fermenting, viNsme
ing, green manure. There are, also, plen
of barn -yards, adding their augean perfu
to swell the volume of the stench which s
%. lutes the nostrils of every passer-by.
Why should not the farmer disinfect
barn -yard and compost heap occasional
with aome cheap disuifectatit like coppera
Would it injure the value of the manure
a fertilizer ? Will some of our farmer frien
tell us i and why cannot the gardner spre Iike
a layer of irt over that huge pile of putr
t
q
factive nt !eri 1 which be erects close to h
dwelling a
lenee of access to his growing plants, to u
for a cold frame.
Our country friends must begin to thi
about cleaning up, and abating sorne of the
nuisances, or we shall cease to think of th
country as the land of pure air and healt
giving breezes, and shall come to regand, th
city with its clean, paved streets, and wel
laid sewers, as the place where one ma
breathe the air of heaven in greatest purit
It is already a recognized fact that filt
diseases of the class to which typhoid fever
belongs, are much more frequent in the noun -
try than in aevrered cities.
*
Moldy Walls.
What makes that brown spot on the par-
lor ceiling? Clean it away as often as you
will, it persistently comes back again. What
do ere it mean ? Simply this : Your house
has the leprosy. If a priest of the time of
Moses could look into your house, he yam&
condemn it to be torn down and carried
away out of the camp, or burned up. This
W4E3 one of the wisest of the wise laws formu-
lated by the pioneer sanitarian of all ages, I
Moses, the Jewish lawgiver, It was far bet-
ter to sacrifice a house than a life, or many
lives as is often done by these damp and
molly houses, Better look into the cause
at once, and remove it. Possibly there is a
leak in the roof • or it may b.e that the
dampness from the kithhen condenses upon
the walls, and furnishes the requisite eon-
ditions for the growth of these fungi, It is
a well-established principle that human be-
ings cannot live in health where mold grows
abundantly. The two grades of life are an-
tagonistic. Where one flourishes, the other
fades.
rim
one
eli-
USE Advioe to a Young Man.
ess My boy, when you meet a, good hearted,
ies, genial fellow, open handed and ,generous, who
of spends money freely when he has it, who
the "doesn't know the value of money", who
It !only esteems it for the good it can do, who
any believes in the lively shilling, and always
en- does his best to make things lively, who
s a can't hoard up money for the life of him,
all who gets it and spends it, and then gets more
rd, to spend, so that all of limey get a little of
d. it, who doesn't put down every cent he lets a
bag friend have, asthough he wasamoney ender,
m- who, if he had only $1 in the world will let
Il- you have ninety cents of it if you ask for it ;
ty a good, whole souled, generous fellow, who
me knows 110 more and cares no more about
a- money than a pig does aboutGreek, andheis
a little hard up, and wants to borrow $10 of
his you for a few days—my boy, don't lend him
ly n eent; don't lend him a cent. Eh ? Do I
? want you to be mean, close-fisted, stingy,
as weighing all friendship and good fellowship
da on the money lender? Oh no, my boy, I did -
ad en't ss.y anythingof the kind. I said, and
e- :repeat it, "don't lend him a cent." I don't
is want you to be mean, I only want you to be
n- business -like. Give him $10 if you have it
se I to subscribe and feel like it; give him what
• money you can spare and your heart and
nk head justify you in giving, but never lend
se that kind of a man a dollar.—(Burdette
h-
1-
• "Some books are to be tasted," says Lord
amen, "othere to be swallowed, and some
h few to be chewed and dieestecl " He i,,2t
•
Bad Books,
have added—"and some to be avoided,"
Coleridge was a great reader; from his own
experience he utters this warning against
reading bad and inferior books:
INever under any circumstances, read a
'
had book; and never spend a serious hour
in reading a, second.rate book. No words
can overstate the mischief of bad reading.
1 Abed book will often haunt a man his
whole life long. It is often remembered
when much that is better is forgotten; it
intrudes itself at the most solemn momenta,
and contatninates the best feelings and emo-
tions. Reading trashy, seconctrate books is
o grevious waste of time, also. •
In the first place, there are a great many
mere first-rate books than ever you can mas-
ter ; and in the second place, you cannot
read an inferior book without giving up an
opportunity of reading a good one. Books,
remember, are friends; books affect charac-
ter; and you can as little neglect your duty
in respect of this as •you can safely neglect
any other moral duty that is cast upon
you.
-
Poultry -Yards.
A neglected poultry -yard soon becomes
one of the vilest of all sources of offense
from a sanitary or au esthetic standpoint.
Notwithstanding this fact, which mud be
tooi ent to require cienionstrntion, how
many I these sources of foul air may be
seen tuir smelled in every country district,
and even within the precincts of many towns
and villages ! It has been pretty cleerly, de-
monstreted that much of the so-called mal-
aria which hi charged to overflowed ponds,
and lakes, and marshes, and low lands, is
really manufactured on the premises of the
sufferers, by just such fever factories as
those referred to. Chickens reared in euch
pestilential holee ati are most chicken coopa
at this fifteen of the year, are not healthy,
and not fit for beaten being, Is it not pos-
sible, and even probable, that the eggs of
such fovel8 May. atelnire an unwholesome
flavor from their intimate relation to organic
filth?
PlOWelel as Disinfectants.
Naturo'S wonderful disposition, to eCon0-
Mize by " killing two birds with one
stone," to use a eolinnon exproesion, is not
the tenet of the triarVele which strike the at-
tention of the careful Student of naturenhie-
tory subjects. Thes is particularly well il-
lustrated in flowers, A. beautiful, fragrant
flower is not Only "a thin of beautyd
a joy forever," hut is an excellent disinfec-
taut as well. It has long been knowe to
ecientista that the volatile substanece which
flowere emit, are among the best of
dreinfecta t . Th MI00, e lenges w rah
Dishonesty.
Dishonesty in its all forma certainly inflicts
much suffering upon those who are cheated,
but it also reacts with force upon the knave.
1 Not only does he suffer the remorse of his
own conscience and risk the penalties of the
law, he must also resign the confidence and
respect of his fellow -men; he must submit to
he always suspected, always distrusted, i
always watched. What he has acquired
wrongfully is apt to be held loosely and
parted with easily. The same tricks that he
.has used,. an perhaps sharper ones, will be
used against him, and a general feeling of
distrnst whicb he has engendered will M f
many ways injure him and baffle hie endea-
vours. This is true in cases from the petty ,
ineanhees whieh Would steal a tram -fare or I
take advantage of a mistake in change up to °
the deliberate and wholesale perfidy that °
f a
speculates on truEit- un sorswindles a cor-
poratiom •. a
What income tele sheet ,of joy o'er ak the earth 7--.
A nation's t enefulness t ildattIt'S ItIttikPt
V,I0141„ whence the cause thee ores eueei joy its birt I
Arid e'er' the world suoixgreet 001r:ration rale° y
For fifty years our noble 91.1e0a bath stood
The trying ordeal of a natIonei erown
Beloved by ali--" Vietorlee the geed,"
O kreedem endled—gave Slavery her frown !
E'en the ugh her lonely years of v. idowhood
She held with dignity 4 illktiOn'El rein ;
Wes ever Queen so well !peeved and good?
Did eyer Bing Keel laeting homatoleain
/ Victoria I as Mother, queen, or Wife g
Thou hest adorned thy pathway alethrough life 1
Totten°, , Jogs Imam.
A Last Farewell to °hullo,
BY ARODIR ?Aka,
In memory of those by -e'en° days, whit* were so
bright and gay,
And of those festive.seenee of mirth, which never-
more must awe!!
A treasured memery of tke past, which looms now
through the gray
A ghost-like phantom of lost joy ; to all bid fare.
well.
Of menthe a ecOrs have yet scarcepassed since he did
hold my hand,
Andpized into zuy downoest face with darkly oripealr-
Of ..gfi;)yrfe h k
w spa e to me, yet could under-
stand
The passion true, too strong for words, to deep for
tears that liee.
And with my hand clesped close in his.
With eyes that 'neath his glances f ell,
As evening shades drew near, I said
That first farewell, that struge farewell,
Thet end farewell to Charlie 1
I deemed him true. When rumours wild were wide-
pered in my ear,
I lauagthileide. in scorn to think that I would liat to such
But daybyfear
grew le strength ; ah, then a
Did gather o'er my trustiag. heart, did turn my young
cheek pale 1
I've learned, alas 1 the fatal truth, that youthful
fancies wane,
That lover, bend in worehip sweet before the nearest
shrine.
I've learned that he who said farewell with eyes of
passionate pain
Has linked his hand, his heart, his Ole, with other
love than mine.
Then once again, but once alone,
Till sounds the latest, deepest knell
That ends life', etruggle, I will say
A sad farewell, a long farewell,
A last farewell to Charlie I
• His Seeend Wife.
In silence sae ra see
Her low drooping heed
To list while he praises
The wife who is dead;
And ever he echoes the old refrain,
"Ohithat was life
With such a wife,
Poor Susan Amanda Matilda Jane V'
She never was idle,
row. syslrun.
°like Mutual Reserve.
°dice of W, D. MAT:thews &
Grain and Produce elerchante,
lento/leo, nth 31.y, 1887.
2), Wells, Esq., Genera/ Manage/a Meat
Large Inettranee Claim eithi-,Enqcorseuxe
Reaenee „Puna We Association..
1 DBAR Sre--We be th aoknowledge r
(mint of cheque for Piu Thousand Dolla
in full ot claim under a, policy of Maternal
issued to es by the Mutual Reserve Fun
Life Asecedatioe for that amouet, credi
ors of the late Edwin C. Fisher.
We hoe much pleasure in bearing testi-
triOny to the prompt and saaisfactory nia
ner in which thie el,em bas been adjuste
and at the same time theexpress our con
thine in your t inceiation. Having an int
mete acquaintance with your President an
chief officers, to know them to be gentleme
of the highest integrity, aid in whose hands
We believe the interests of the membera of
the Mutual Reserve are nerfeetly safe.
Wishing your association coutinued suc-
cess.
1 •
1 lams, sr„.4.T221 nolo ri
lit .
Iianufeeturer Etntl dealer ill
Warred Felt, in000nr, rAtch, alluding rm.
PerS, Caritet and Deafening Felt ItEADY
ROOFINO, Etc, 4 Adelaide Re E, TOBONW,
e-
J.L.JONES
WOOD ENGRAVE
10 KING S1 EAST
TORONTO.
ater4LIGERS, bore 20 Iret
j .414ratis
d• per hour; Also itoch DOHS—Hand, Horse or
t- steam Power, Send for Catalogue.
LaIdlaw illanueneturIng Co.
flAtolturON, OBT.
41
d,
Yours truly,
truly,
W. D. MATTnews & CO.
Catarrh, Catarrhal Deafness and
Ray Fever.
Sufferers ars not generally aware that these digeases
are contagious, or that they are due to the presence
of living parasites in the lining ruembrane of the nose
and eustachian tubes. Microscopic research, however,
hes proved this to be a toot, and the result 18 that a
eiMple remedy has been formulated whereby catarrh,
catarrhal deafness and hay fever are oured in rorn
one to three simple applicatione made at home. A
pamphlet explaining' thie new treatment ie sent free
on receipt of stamp by A. IT, Dixon & SOD. 808 King
Street West Tomato Canada
On one occasion while he was President
Mr. Lincoln left the White House and walk-
ed a mile on a hot day in order to speak a
good word for a friend who desired an ap
pointment to office.
People who are subject to bad breath, foul coated
tongue, or any disorder of the Stomach, can at once
be relieved by using Dr, Carson's Stonaach Bitters,
the old and tried remedy. Ask your Druifidet
First Rival (with malice)—" What an un-
nteresting crowd there is here to-nightt
Mr Ogilvie says even I outshine the rest of
he world." Second Rival (sweetly)—" Yea,
O told me you, looked warm."
A orRE FOR DRUNKENNESS;
plum, morphine, chloral, tobacco, and
*fared habits. The medicine may be given
n tea or coffee without the knowledge of
he person taking it if so desired. Send 6c.
O stamps for book and testimonials bora
hose who have been cured. Address M.
. Lubon, 47 Wellington St. East, Toronto,
nt. Cut this out for .future reference.
When writing mention this paper.
Mrs. Spriggins remarks that she would
ther fool with a bee than be with a fool.
LADIES
Who are Weak, Remus and exhausted ; vrho feel
emselves losing strength ; who are pale, delicate and
okly In appearance, Buffeting from the many con:t-
aints peculiar to women—send for and read
. LUBON'S Treatise in await Foam on the DU.
ses of Women. Mailed sealed and secure from
servation on receipt of fie. in stamps, UNSRALND
Address, M. V. IdU1101% 47 Wellington Se
ast. Toronto. Ont,
The Princess of Wales has had her daugh-
rs taught the complete art of dress -making.
he Princess herself understands both its
eory and practice, and this is one reason
hy she is always so perfectly dressed.
YOUNG MEN suffering from the effects of early
habits, the result of ignorance and folly, who find
°twelves weak, nervous and exhausted; also Mr.
11,4058 and OIM MEN who are broken down from the
acts of abuse or over -work, and in advanced life
I the consequences of youthful excess, sandier and
AD Lubon's Treatise on Diseases of Men. The
ok will be sent sealed to any address on receipt of
a 30. stamps. Address M. V. LUBON, 47 Welling -
St. East Toronto 'ant
Work will shortly be resumed on the On.
10 and Quebec Railway.
She never would tire;
Her temper oould bridle, i
Her servants inspire. t
And ever her virtues he sang again: V
"No one could be
0
Like her to me,
Poor Susan Amanda Matilda lane I"
She never spent money,
Was ever content;
. To have a new bonnet
Would never (=sent ;
Yet summer or winter, or shine, or rain,
Would never stay th
From church away si
Ilis Susan Amanda Matitda jam
Was never too early 60
Was never too late ob
Iler dinner was ready
Or ready to wait.
But al I he never should see again
With mortal ey es
Such peerless pies— te
Poor Stumm Amanda Matilda, Jane I
Could sew on hie buttons, th
Darn, break -stitch, and hem,
Each button a pioture,
Each darn was a gem,
evil
*A vision of beauty, a pearl without stain 1 th
When she was them
His woes to share, eff
DL
Poor Susan Amanda Matilda Jane fee
RR
In silence she listens,
Till sudden there lies bo
An ember that glistens tw
Deep down in her eyes. ton
" To praise her yet farther to me ie vain ;
.No ene," quoth she,
tar
"Regrets like me
Poor Susan, Amanda- Matilda Jane"
The Correct Time.
There are very few men who do not pride
themselves on always having the correct
time; and wonderful and delicate mechan-
isms are devised to enable them to d
o so
But the more delicate a chronometer is
made, the more subject it becomes to de-
• rangement, and unless it be kept always
perfectly clean, it soon looses its usefulness.
What wonder, then, that the human ma-
chine—so much more delicate and intricate
than any work of Man ---should require to
be kept thoroughly cleansed. The liver is
the maiinspting of this complex structure,
and on the impurities left in the blood by a
disordered liver, depend most of the ills
flesh is heir to. 'Even consumption (which
is lung -scrofula), is traceable to the imper-
fect action of this organ. Kidney diseases
skin diseitses, sick headache, heart disease,
dropsy, and a long catalogue of grave mal-
adies have their origin in a torpid, or slug-
gish liver. Dr. Pierces's Golden Medical
discovery, by establishing a healthy, normal
action of the liver, acts a cure and preven-
tive of these diseases.
The receipts for the six Patti performances
in opera in New York city amounted to al-
most $70,000.
A. Memory of Early Days.
Bane of childhood's tender years,
Swallowed oft with groans end tsars,
How it made the flesh recoil,
Loathsome, greasy easter oil 1
Search your early memory dose,
Till yea find another dose;
, MI the shuddering frame revolts
At the thought of Epsom Its 1
Underneath the pill -box lid
Was a greater horror hid,
Climax of all inward ills,
Huge and griping old blue pills
What a contrast to the mild and gentle
action of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative
E'elbe.8, sugarcoated, easy to take, cleans -
ng, recuperating, renovating the system
without wrenching it with agony. Sold by
druggists,
•
The Crown Princess of Germany is very
benevolent, and her chief delight 18 10 pro
moting schemes for the education of the un
ortunate classes.
$500 Reward
a offered, in good faith, by the manufactur
rs of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy for
ase of catarrh which they cannot cure. I
a niqd, soothing:and healing in its effects,
nd cures "cold in the head,” catarrhal
deafness, throat ailments and m th
er
omplications of this distressing disease. 60
ents, by druggiste.
The Chinese flag on the French stearner
A. P. Sae.
acomerrremma....rearra
GOOD mu AGENTS WANTED IN EVERY
County in Canada, Address,
FERIUS at CO., 87 Church St., Toronto-
„imoramo-nelsANDCANVASSIIRS wantedMale
or Female, whole or spare time, on salary or commis
Bion. Industrial TJnion of B.N.A 46 Arcade, Toronto,
4C11-2-001is—Gentlemen
A_ desirous of acquiring a thorough knowledge of
garment cutting should apply at once to S. CORRIGAN,
122 Yonge St., Toronto. Termson application.
•
200 AfCroRmE2imrmOitermSatLStillronit rIr alsIgoLE
nt
B mitten ; .100 is timbered, pine, oak, hardwoed ;
good buildings, W. PROUD, Boyne P.O., one
A NEW MERV MOWER SHARPENER—
•_LA_ Will sharpen the knife without taking it out;
Every farmer will buy it AGENTS WANTED.
CLEMENT & CO., TORONTO.
Timm llsaaluees Co/lege, tine1Pbs Ont.
Twelve States and Provinces already represent!
on the roll of this Institution. To thorough, prac-
tical instruction, and the efficiency and success of
Ole graduates, this College owes its popularity Din
culars, giving terms, eto., mailed free,
M. MD:300RM= Princepal.
110) EATER IMF, OF STEAMSHIPS,
_LP weeldy between Montreal and Liverpool.
RATIIS Pesseee :—Saloon, liontreal to Liverpool,
$40, 860, and 860; Return Tickets, 580, 890, and 8100
—according to Steamer and accommodation. Inter•
mediate and Steerage at lowest rates. For further
partieulers and to secure Berth, apply to 0. E.
MURRAY, General Manager, 1 Custom Bouse
Square, Moutreal, or to the Local Agents in the die
Arent Towns and Dines.
AGENTSD;ITATDIFIRT[P.
_ St. Catharines, Ont.
PATENTS ,I,71Mirg,l'rninntrtadt:11:164;', and
tent Attorneys, and experts in Patent Causes, Estab-
lished 1867. Donald C. Ridout at Co., Toronto,
SPOONER:8 OOPPERINE 2:101iMiTtT
i?for joujirna,..1 bseusiorili.nigies7inevImichitarl.
naent. Ask your nardware tomer for t. 0 W.
SPOONER, Patentee and Ilanufaoturer, Port Hope.
rpIRACIIERS and Students, Attention I
Special classes during summer holidays, 'n
ealtioortImnd, Typewriting, Book-keeping, Penmanshilp,
write for fun particulars. Canadian Business
University and Shorthand Iostitute, Public Library
Building, Toronto,
TI108. 13ENGOIIGH, President,
CHARLES BROOKS, Manager.
a CLOTHES WRINCERSIE.v,
3 kinds ;
t oWashing Machines, 2 kinds. Churns, Carpet Sweep..
rs, Meat Choppers, Trucks, and other sundries.
HAMILTON INDUSTRIAL WORRS CO., Hamilton Canada.
Send foe article wanted. 1 lustrated catalogue.
st
0
What She Liked.
The maiden set eo near thy ann.
Around her weise I threw it :
And then not meaning tatty Mem,
I kissedher ere. she kneW 16, a
She turned an angry gimlet+ at me, i
Her face grew red, rind then
She frowned and said, "14 like to see
Yee just try that twain I" a
" Wey, eertettily, Siveet maid," a said. lif
1 did—could I be blained?
This time she only blushed and said, S
"Yu ought to be ashamed. r ni
6 which carried the Chinese Minister and. his
uit to Europe wee borrowed frorn the Min-
ster himself, the ship not owning one.
Read our advertishig whining cerefully,
nd when you come to the advertisement of
eColl Bros. & Co, read it twice, and then
end for a barrel of their lardine if you use
achine oil,
People in the North-west
te
11
li!Cnow from eX•perience that Putnam's PI
l'a nlees Corn Extractor is the only remedy f°
to be relied upon for the extraction of corm.
This is the case evetywhere throughout the
an
Dominion. Be sere to get Putinun's sure- ; Ca
pop corn cure, At cleared's ever Where M
The rernains a the Roman city of Silehee-
r, which forms a part of the Duke of Wel-
ngtou's Strathfieldea3re estate, ate to be
•eaerved, to the great joy of English arch-
ologists.
Whenever your stomaolt or Bowels get out of or.
1, causing Biliousness, Dyspepsia, or Itulfgeetfon.
a their attatideet evils, tele at ones ti deo Of Dr,
' S " ' r es family medielne.
1 Dui tots 86
Y
• Awnings it es
f trg1et wit*.
, Wholesale anti
ertATHe GOLD MilDAL Tette MAtitieecteomike,at7OtitelnQgBSTI:
NVest, Toronto, NAVONAL MANUFACTU'Ree CO.
/trek 10, IseS.—aor two years my
wife's health was run down. She woe
greatly emaciated and too weak to de
anything for herself ; she was given tiP
b doctor, they ell paseed the
opinion that she could not live, She
commenced using Dr. jug's Medicine in
December, 1884, and after taking elx
betties she was so much improved that
e 00U740ok after her houeeheldduties,
J. M. Robeteir, Engineer, 0 P, le, West
tr112'22Eu° HE LoNDohl GumtANTEE
I maul AND ACCIDENT CO. MD), OF LONDON, ENO.
i Capital, 4200,000, Dominion Governmeet Deposit,
466,000. Head Office 78 king St, Bret oronto
teentlomen of Influence War tbd
distnota A, T. McCORD,.
Resident Seeretery for the Dominion.
DejU6e
MEDICINE,
roRo
LUNGS
&
000.
ationa ° $15. I 'P. t •
°ELECTIT
23 ADELAIDE ST. E., TORONT0,
All classes offine work. Mire, of Printers' itattede
*logs and Metal- Pen:there, Sepal for Pekes
all aper
MAN:UFACTU RE RS.
M. .STAUN—TON ee Cats
Samples on application. TOR ONTO,OISIT
BAByrs BIRTHDAY.
• 4.136..tif,a, Imported Birthday Card sent
to any baby whose ',nether will send us the
names Of two 01 11010 other babies, nd their
parents' addresses Also a handsome Dia- '
mond Dye Saneple Card to the mother and
Toneh valuable information.
Wells, Richardson du Co., Montreal,
.dirikNTARIQCAN:OE COMPANY
711•100"
4, Peterboro',. .Ont.
MANUFACTUR'S OF ALL KINDS OF
elTSend 3o. Stamp for Catalogue. GANOES
Allan Line Royal Nail Steamships
Sailing during winter from Portland every Thurada;
and Held= every Saturday to Liverpool, and in sure
mer from Quebec every Saturday to Liverpool, call*
at Londonderry to land mails and passengets tot
Scotland and Ireland; also from Baltimore, via Hall -
fax and St. John's, N. P., to Liverpool fortnightly
during summer months. The steamers of the Gies
gow lines sail during winter to and from Halifax,
Portland, Boston and Philadelphia; and during:me
mer between Glasgow and Montreal weekly; Glitegov
and Boston weekly, and Glasgow and Philadelphii
fortnightly
For freight, paasage, or other nformation apply it
A.. Schtunticher & Co., Baltimore; S. Cunard & Co,
Halifax; Shea & Co., St, John's, Nfld.; Wm. Thomp
son & Co., St. John, N.B,; Mien & Co,, Chioage
Love & Alden, New York; 11, Bourilur, Toronto
Miran, Rae I& Co., Quebec; Wm. Brookie, ladled&
phia; H. A. Allen Portland Boston, Montreal.
ONS
I have a pealtive remedy for *Ito above di seat ;by 44, ose
thotisanda °Ceases 01 850 worst kind and of ong atanding,
have been cured. Indeed, so strong le my faith la ftt
efficacy, that I will send TWO ROTTLM th
FREE, togeer
with VALI74/3LE TREATISE; on this disease to •or
eufferee Give °agrees and'', a address.
DR. T. A. SLOCITEI,
Branch Office, 37 'ono t., TOTORt0
"301:TM cinEt irrar-17
SILVER ,PLATE Co,
Manufacturers of the highest grades of
SILVER PLATED WARES.
Steel KillireS, Spoots, Forks, Etc.,
A .SPECIALTY.
ALL GOODS GUARANTEED.
TORONTO, CANADA.
Tiirate
=CP
vas snow britt Baking powder Co„ Brantford, Hsi
THE
FAVORlif 1
Dairy Salt
„MR BUTTER, ETC.
EW 1mpertetione —Biggins" Eureka, Waehinge
ton and Aehton Brands, in large or email Sachs.
Aleo Rice's Canadien Salt. Writ for prime,
JAMES PARE ik SON,
Wholesale Provieion Merchants, Teronto,
Bicycles I
SEIUTd7.2 2,11,12,r °
aFROM $15 UPWARDS
. , New Catelogee Ready let April
A. T. LANE, MONTREAL
1 C E FITS!
When 1 801 cure 1 tie Pet mean merely 10 stop theta ler a
time and then have them return agaIn., 2040.0, ridleall
taro. 1 have Janda the disease oCririTe,gelE,RPSY or, PAW.
LNG SICIINEnh ilfedong study, 1 varrent knY rolsedi
to cure the worst cans. Because ottani have haled le no
reason for not new receiving Ma. Rona at Cara for ft
tree tine and 05408 Bottle col 117 2014,814,1 remedy, Give
EXPr444 0441 gpa 0000. (1088*. yen hothWA
in• for • ,
and I will cure yen, AdIreaa DR. R. 0, ROOT,
Branch OMea, 37 Ionia St Toronto.
MERIDEN BRITTANNIA 00.
MANUFACTURE ONLY
FINEsir
SILVEPPLATED
WARE
Artistic Designs, combined with
'Unequalled Durability
and Finish.
EE...9.304Exr...exasT
.74timon.a.,1
DALL YS
DALE
FINE
GOLD
EXTRACTS
'TRUE
FRUITS
arm
FINE GOLD
EXTRACTS
ABSOLUTELY PURE
FROM SELECT FRUIT-
S= EVERYWHERE
The Perry Cart
1181800
TWO SIZES, SURREY AND'PHAETON BODIES.
The Shafts are attached to body by the Perry Com-
pensating Springs. T -a" it of the action of these
Springs is no horso.....otioan, the cart, and no cart
motion on the horse.
Descriptive illustration on application. For sale
by all c.ariage mo.ken.
CANADA CARRIAGE PARTS CO.,
TORONTO,
Sole Manufacturers for Canada.
The,Trade-only supplied.
This Splendid Machine 011! Has never VecLietvciepettotteireet awards
It Has No Egnal, Farmers, Threshers and. Millmen Use No Other,
This Oil keeps the Machinery* in first rate wonting wrier. thereby lessenirg the chances of accidents and
breakdowns To be had of all fast -class dealers. Beware of Imitations ! •
Try our 000 Fire Test Cylinder Oil. Ilarn.ess, Bolt Cutting, Wool and
Lard Oils always in stork.
SOLE IRANCFACTUNERS OF LAIL DINE.
111`COILL BROS. ari. CO. - TORONTO
L D. SAWYER & CO., Hamilton, Out
MANUFACTURERS OF
" L. D. $." ENGINES,
WOOD, COAL AND STRAW BURNERS,
PLAIN AND TRACTION,
Grain Saver1' and Peerless"
.4111..7Et AIL yr a 1:tiel.
"Pitts" Morse POWCIVa. for 2, 4, 0, 8. 10 and
12 Dames,
Tread Powers, for 1, 2 and 3 Sterses.
itellpse Separators, for Tread dt Small Powers.
lewd for Illustrated Catakigu,.
The Ori
Cook.
1 D11;:11117Slit."''y‘ll‘. .PEi't74,:-1:ECiziT:01:.1-
Il1itNSTOVE VET INTRODUCED.
4:71r17'
.... ,,-. ,
7i &14 a
go r:1 8 '''''' 111-1,1—j4.7.0.0tornmr:
....:, ., ,.,
1,9
. ..
di P
en it
4:
us
tr
P
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"--.--.- a-
a g.
oe re
oe
ae
tA zmimi„ ae _._, a a •-..7.„
92
MI
a ...... ,
MADE (14:10.DIFFERENT STYLES AND SIZES, ' - FOR ME BY ALL THE LEADINO DEALERS,
0lAN7774.0850085117)
THE E. & O. GURNEY 00.5, (HD, TORONTO.
Dealers who have not yet 8800 this STOVE should eeoure the We of lie* Mace.