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The Exeter Times, 1890-8-7, Page 3A STRANGE COURTSHIP CHAPTER XVII.—A TIFF Alin ITS CON- S Reim:sees.. The word "Immediate" frightened simple Mabel, She had lived far from the atmos- phere where such electric disturbatzces as "telegrams" are common. things ; and even a letter which demanded haste had its vague' terrors. She was accustomed to. do mulch of her father's 1 tter•writing for bine, for though a divine, ho was a lazy Haan with his pen ; but she had hardly any correspondents of her own, As sleeflewup-stalrsto the sitting room, all the personal tliouahts which had so lately possessed her mind. clean vanished, and their place was occupied with one ap- prehension: Slid anything happened to Cousin Martha Barr? This ielatzve of the Denham family was a lady o£ advanced}•ears and scanty means, who had always been a great favourite with thetwo sisters, but es vsith Ma •. She had nothing. to re- commend her—being old, anugly, and poor, andusingaplainnessofspeeeh andmanner that 'was often mistaken for vulgarity—with the ezceptieme. a heart as sound as a bell, and en infte a determination to obey her coo - science.' .fere rector, in his bluffopen•ltaud ed way, had znorethan once endeavoured to confer upon her some material benefit—and a very little aid would have gone far with one of her email needs — but she had ' invariably rejected all assistance. ‘41 wish to be your friend, dohn, all my life, and especially eau children's friend, and thatl cannot belt 1 becamoyour ppensioner."' To thiaresolve shelled steadily kept; hit she would veritably not have de- clined the tender aid of the Denham girls in any physical distress. She lived quite alone, at an out.of•the-way village by the sea ; and for an instant the thought oc,:ur• red to label how welcome would such a summons be, if such it were : To be left alone in quiet Was what she yearned for ; ie tend the pillow of a siek friend would be the very oeeupaelon to rescue her from her own bitter thoughts. lout thenextmonent she reproached herself for having entertain taiued so selfish a reflection, " What is it. Ju.?—what is the matter?" cried she, as she opened the door of their apartment with a haste and suddenness somewhat imprudent, considering that it oral the bower of a bride and bridegroom. Her appearance, indeed, was not quite op. portune, since Frederick 'vas is the net of zemoving the recent trate of tears from leer sisters cheek by osculation. "I beg pardon," murnruretl poor ;Mabel ; "but 1 was so frigirteued by what the man told me about the letter."' Frederick bad bolted on to the balcony. from whence little explosions of laughter could now be heard. Ju's face watt crimson, and elle looked annoyed, as she replied; "There is nothing to be frightened at ; only paha is not quite well, and ]Or, Bowen has written"— "Papa ill 1" said Mabel, claspping her bands. "and all alone at home: Olt, let me go to him at once." "No, no," replied du., a little sharply ; "there is no occasion for that ; I would baro gone myself if there had been, you may be sure. �t is only a ptssuuf, indisposition ; but Dr. Bowen eaya it Isom of the question that ho should mune to -morrow, as he hada intended ; and loaderlel: and I aro at. on Thursday, so that we shall not be able to wish him goodbye ; and that is what matte me cry, Papa particularly bees—see, be has writ -ton a few lines himself in peneil that yutl``will not hurry back. He wishes you to Mash out your holiday. He says •�- •�\ Mabel iteos• "But Ju. interim tell e i u It 1 e ►, pt 1 "Well, well, not in words perhaps ; but you let aim know plainly enough—or else he would not have gone away—that his atten- tions were distasteful to you. For my part, I should never have fcrgiven my dear little May,if she bad encouraged such a cub.' "" Frederick'-" She shook herself free from his tender hold, and regarded him with in, dignation. "" Why, you don't mean to say he wasn't a eub, or to pretend to like him 1" answered Frederick.; "and if you did not like him, you would surely not have consented to marry him, though he bad ten times ten henceforth to be of a different sort. thousand a year. I think I know my little ilia was always "" lad #o hear of dear The license of a public house is really a dee 1, y in erts a constables to enter such lou g t their d' _ besides, it is to Mabel as well as to me" --- "Kiss her, Fred,," cried Mabel iznpera- Public houses in En laud have always tively; and with a good-natured smile, with g, which a little curl of contempt in vain en- been under polie control, In the manoo p courts they are under the supervision of two deavoured to mingle, Fred. kissed hiswife officers annually checked by the homage. accordingly. When the local jurisdietfon of the parish Let us hope that the tiff ended there be- was gradually and finally transferred to the tween them, never to be referred to at Justices the lineensing systeof our day curtain -lecture or other dangerous m us damestie commenced; Itis only the county magis- season again. Its sil'eets upon Mabel and traates erho` baeo the control of lieonses; the l. her fortunes were unhappily destined to be # giant, the refusal to grant, and the revision lasting. lei decisions arrived byborough It is sad to think what a little cause Is a t e town in thelaw magistrates. Recent decisions in the .law sufficient,at eto separate two boor human souls coups have affirmed that the discretion. of i a} clung to one another for yep ,rs, the Quarter Sessions is absolute, and that • and, especially it they are female souls, l he Englisk'ub3,ic gooses. two sisters dui not cease to love one another; hut on one side, at all events, the leve was there is as yet absolutely no property in the license. quite irrespectively of the conduct of the lie use. May better eto n that." upon discover- Maters wet' being," '" de 1 • t t d r mere form of police, eptitlii the malice .,i- e relief o w about her," "and genuinely eager to do" all u se. a sir is ing that it was Horn Winthrop ito whom her ' g y s p1p cretion, #o report en the character of those e Odell brother-in-law was alluding, and that her bowl of e s steel lovfor her eers brokebut n by that 1 who keep end those who frequent such } y to Ricawas t' unsuspected, attachment i b rd still ins to bows, to f us It some chock o r e ,n d un n 1?p k nesse „Lamp o of elbow. unz pY7 g the wasso great,she felt quite grateful p e othat f 1 s z i She might have forgiven her for having snit disorder, and to prevent, if possible Frederick for his mistakensuspie►ml. Mr their being made the harbor of ertminals. 1. Horn Winthrop is nothing to me, dear Dred, been the innocent occasion of quarrel "'ling The regulations do something in these three. nor would he be, even if ho had asked #o be tween herself and Frederick, but size could : tions, but only a htmle, as all who are ue• anything." not forgive her having been the cause of 1 on a' k d i m c with the trade testify. The con " an Heaven for that 1" cried Fred- their reeoneiliation. That Icer appe .l #al- itio 0 1 Thank H e. thou"h Julia3 hal been inllueneed b " pet n f public houses is very sharp, the dieteemird his late confidewith an nt es res ous. that rather me lilt.) sly uld have brougbt back leer hnstawl s bbout the °rattracting customerslis very great, p Ii s to herr, was a thounbt that never lost ,; profits, if alt I heard is true, are felt rendered. t nsuchamount a creatureliacceptable ought ta'; bitterness, anti seenee l alniost to 'ustif • ( theenoy ceps. Certainly the price at tiw•hielt • the vera suspicion which she had confessed y they change hands from brewer to brewer Mabel Denham, and yet I am overjoyed to ` to 1,e groundless. She newer :;aid this nor. is very often many times in care: s of the hear it from your own lips.". Here he kias : anything like it, in trouts, nor perhaps even , capital value of that at which they are rated. ed, not them, but her forehead, in an adini:tted nt to herself • but she fe t t and t, It is now proposed that a system of super. a prinde ; brotherly fashion, e, some pea, o. w' a t 're - awae e o n o 1 z , , i vision, ander which feeble attempts are ge, ' teed, like Mrs, Marshall, hold that- n t zth nein lr g il rt f c 4"aimeut, r matte at limiting the number of sueb toruses irls will merry anybody.yfor money ; and caused misers to irel it It was not her and rigid police Inspection is tI►emetic " 3 Fault, Julia teasas:eiastl,lesedgood sawife P a,ly She has put it into your ri. ststiou head, as I as could be Tonna within the fou seas—it eufterwed, mos be lacltl to have ereaterl a believe, that the afsarr m serious. But, for was a sot anal a sl►arae, said Mrs. Jfats1tall property Sat ti owner, anti tl.at if tbt' re.1 toy Bart, 1 always said that there was Wool, ' newalotthelieeuse is to berefuseiI,tierefueal ing in it ; and now we know that there is very justly, to export her to China—but she is to he mule amoral. ides fun• eempomminn ; nothing, let 115 all be jolly again together, was awanlaa. . that in brief,amataistohertaftcritaveaneMate May, and don't l o, starling, For nay mho, Netliin more was .aid concerning thisunin his 1-411:11: pnvrer of trroeafter g, `fisc+news Flo Stay, ', aril"---- "Frederick ---� dinner tl�att tdaytr�vl r a Mabel�ieoi enol the :Toren, itrue, is pperenisf;iv e, but the sting "" Frederick 1"e • of the measure is the virtual reet,guiti n of It was unite another ""Frederick'" from o"ms as zr of her a�sia"er- a� tit t wrhe 4re In tory' it < a now kiad of property in a calling. which that which had left Mabel'e lilts a minuto ai d f .r..,, .on gr rhate > s :artesta;+lan sal tits, present law ,lc Glares to he no property ago, though that else bad been reproachful frettinfi about dear papa, it would iz eruti at at In this eazle. I cannot but conclude and indignant. to keep leer, ,What strut kredericl: think ?„ that the tlectrinc of vested interests has Mrs,fwhich Pennant stood at the open door, the been came,' to a point wbieh it has never handle of which shoo!. in leer treanirliu}; Snie shoulders,'ere"You hail pulletlmn`e" ''o' t'y atgl is is reached before.• els, her face, always pale, by contrast with ar, ""autl hetterset;lertbetw•eeh o ig-'• tier levee hair, quite white with passion ;leer , . ,pp Y There i9, generally speaking, nothing da'e eyes flaming with ed e e lag in 1 w meantimewaast �meelthauglike this; green about a widow, notwithstnndieg her "My dear Julia,"exclaimed I Fr 1 r i k in tag1i wcomeu are Rusts'• • ho meant 111 one re' w tion, slzmmn net wildlyfreefrom trepida spat, lnrt when one relleets one often gen, • tion. what is the matter,'" - and l was a fool to an se that 44Uli, nathieg," returned she,. with a short eralasts...p N .; 1Y MArlo • Atter laughu"'nothing at all, 1 +lansay a1 Lo spay, ed th re -ilk ho leas not. utherr press it's quite a usual thing to find one's huebtanal ; Weak, Nervous, Debilitated, with lois arms around a oun • girl's waist the °whets of the nitt ono will be fanned who In hie Follysod Ignorance bas Td- hissing her, and asking her ttili'la aonlcthiegi`rneti , The poor little Hain}; lead better fled *IOW ibls Vigor et Body, Plllnd and for 'issake, which she has refused to do forgo• Manhood, oatialns oz;kauslia� ,trains apse her ow u, sister's." And Ota the following day, Mabel Denham um Fota stains et Lite, t eltdstshos, Celltrtenta "0 dear, U"dear 1" cried Mabel, wrin ile went b lit parting shome 'v'•nt1 her sister awl I'reti t�i[emory�� Baehr IitsiPrsaatet ae b 8ugllitl►, her hands. "How can. you Pa such rltec',t info,' thin 'S Ju, oe was of enema $:all one, since it was ceresin n 1 y� aQgneu let "1 dont blame lion, child," obevrvee airs, they would not tweet again for at le:tstsesen r Inoantty ill l)Awl :I:,ar wtneun . l • Pennant coldly; "Mel forbid 1 should. 1t is"�'eaats ; but it was lees I►�rignant by fa than 'Oeltive Dere, :lt Inspects Yotrthfel with In}' husband Holy thee my quarrel lies, q t"au► •aridl•twcuty h,'m l i,efora cella± enuld lr;or restores the Vital Power is old aau and it las► just one. t have possibly expected, She longed to ho at Dune. strengthens oud iu rtgoratcs t9„ Orate Immo and aline. The old Professor hail held ' d Norvep t,utlAc up trto museal,tr arravm ""A jnvt one:" exela �meo Frederick withad ■rouse■ filto action cba i hot. pial 41ei1 comfit' vehemence. "Yon must be mild tether ktn�;ers so tiFlit and long at their lnod- woreyaf vile human rratno. 7 lull cur spdrei4, mall it se 1 You should bo ashamed to speal:(1►ye,.tlrat Fred. s Iasi joke had been that `e ; leo. t mthen-met v mecum siana°vans sisal, na ta`iri Iwus offering her hie aneienthand tokeep for , such eti a d. you .'nt used ill the pltia crlcedayi, Enol Iaaalk t o cortwa wo i tram of a '+rod and innocent id�, good ; but elle was scarcely no grateful as ' ant, l'rjeo SL Lhr-rea Cuarauuacd, ur riwa• $ Mr. Flint's aft etion deserved of her. Mrs, Iso No...i,Is an infallible uretor sat pia '"It is of ;flour innocence that. 1 have a 'alarehnll had kissed her tumultuously, and t7Jegiiseanomtatterof ta,w inns stuff - Mes., sir, and not of here," interrupted }rlesscd her San n cssivel " for `"a Pon dear I Ing. sold under our written Cuttrantoo to 'Mrs. Pennant, ""this rs not the Met time „ I }after$ •rinse, Prtoa 45" reroute Siedioin. that your behaviour towards Mabel ltasgive;t girl ; and she hail submitted with a good vo . Tcranco, oat. me eause for displeasure ; it has been noticed' graee, but without being correspondingly by others also"'� atleeteq. station—by tinn3tl succi lentTarp leq n�," sine 1 LADIES ONt..i,= "Then it's that Wenzel old idiot, also"— ;Neve 1, ' \isur h ill "broke ill 1`iedernml. passionately. knew not which—and bowed his adieus with i FRENCH REGULATION PILI. % lea ilaua1 ••ia' u ; lent th • had not disturbed'; tsar superior to ° her. 11ernrnnew•as reoecuptedwitilitsowe Oxide- Endorsed b4 the thousands of adios ar a them 10RTli oval' h a f � _ ho ns � LX, fan. Relieve Ergot, P r Tansy-. oun Fro aT o .. Ke r "She i] pD , SY Y , fool her, tea i , Isla ► h made you a s -sea as y "T sllottl,t be miserable here to think that `s "'You are mat kind and outcome. I sun sorrow. 7 hiec mut ler tluttl,h.�mdtndna;; • pata, INSURE REGULARITY, Plaasant grid poor papa is solitaryet the vicars rc "" sure ; but it was not Mrs. dar:eha1'.'s eyes' ev eu her father's illi" (e blah, to do her' Etreotual. Price, $3, Toronto riedie;ne Co, p But he isnot solitary ; Martha •Barr is that save vnu ki: s Mabel a minute a n'tiee etre bad been Demanded to Toronto, Ont, 1 1 lightly 1• f 1 go, or -' . , with him, as you can read. No sort of appreheesiau need be entertained at present, says Dm Bowen ; and it is papa's ppartieular wish thet you should stay on. lie thinks it issueppreeset] gout, and hopes to have it out by the time you eome back, and "to he very cross by that time, as usual." He writes quite cheerfully, you see, and like himself. " I shall go Monte," said Mabel decisively, ]ravine read the letter. Julia looked astonished, as well as dis- pleesed, bite had never known her sister act in opposition to her opinion before, and of course she was ignorant of the other reasons, which, besides ]ler father's illness, were urging May to depart from Shingleton. "" I can do nothing with Mabel, Frederick 1" exclaimed Julia in discontented tones. "Per- haps you can persuade her." Tho obedient Frederick at once made his appearance at the window, "" My dear May, I tlo hope you are not envinlbegotvernorrun away from us wilt be all right in a day o two ; and remember we are leaving England on Thursday foe Heaven knows how long. If he were really ill, Jo. and 1 would be both going to hiin ourselves, instead of en- deavouring to prevent your doing so. As matters are, upon my life I am so selfish as hardly to regret this slight attack, for we wished him good-bye already, before we thought of coiling to Shingleton, and Ju. would be so dreadfully upset at parting with him, just as she needs all her strength for her long voyage. There, she has left the room,: no doubt to have ' a good cry' at the mere thought of it. She needs your com- pany just now; Mabel ; indeed, she does, as much as she aver dial in her life." " She has got you," said May, herself dis- solved in tears ; " but. papa has got no- body ; at least no one to love and nurse him as I could do, though Martha Barr is very good." "Listen to me, dear May," said Frederick tenderly, the sight of her tearful ,beauty piercing his heart. "There is another Trea- son why you should stay here, if you will forgive me for speaking about it." ""Another reason 1"• May felt that she was growing crimson, though without. knowing iavi y,'except for a vague thought of Richard. You know I am not a man who cares for mere cenventionalities," he continued; "still, a young lady in your position 'cannot be too particular, too prudent.'.' Here the ready Frederick began to stammer. ""I feel you must think mea great fool :; it is so difficult to talk of theserthings;, but since Ju. has not made use of the argument, Iam obliged to do so.` Somebody left Shingleton to -day, unexpectedly. People will chatter, you know. Ii you svereyto;;leave .the:same, day as he, it would look so odd. Ju. and I,' of course, . know that there is nothing in it ; but folks like Mrs: Marshall ""put two and two together," as they call it; anti' :fancy themselves very wise. Now, don't cry, May, darling, for nobody, blames you, or can blame. you. :It is only your being, so.pretty and charming, which you can't help." She was sobbing now,as;though her little.. heart wouldbreak ; and, perhaps with some vague view of averting that catastrophe, Frederick passed his, arm; rdiied her dainty -waist. "0f course the man couldn't help falling in love with you, May ; every one must do that; and you were quite right to -give : him. all eo:tfle." "But Frederick, I did noel" exclaimed Mabel with sudden vehenletice. her ears that heard von call her 'zlurlin"• • t iii t ire rt } o , out espee 3 s nee a and tell her her sister's head was turned.' "0 Ju. 1" said Babel be'eecllingly; indeed yoeare very wrturg, and oli, so cruel to poor Frederick 1" "It would be more becoming, Mabe]," ob- served Juliasharply, "if, instead of leaking' excuses for my husband, you were to go to your room." "Slee shall not go to her room," cried Frederick decisively, "nor leave us for an instant, until this matter is settled. You are blinded by a devil of jealousy, whom you have raised yotueetf out of nothing* You ]rave entertained a shooking and shameful suspicion, for which, when you come to your senses, you will be sorry enough, and 1 insist on its being; retracted. I wilt say notating of it as respects Mabel— it would be a wickedness to associate her with a ealtminy at once so groundless and so base ; it is to nee, your husband, who swore at the altar scarce a month ago to be faithful to you till death, that you owe an apology. Yon have wronged and insulted ole most infamously, roost cruelly ; and I insist upon your expressing regret for it." "And you you have nothing to express regret about," rejoined Mrs. Pennant, hut in a tone of less audacity than her words im- plied ; for it was not only plain that her husband was deeply wounded, but also that her husband was deeply wounded, but also that he believed himself to have been so without cause. "I may have something to express regret about," answered he coldly, "if you con- trive to behave in this manz:er ; I may have to acknowledge a mistake committer -1i by myself—to repent an alliance, which"— "Frederick ! Julia 1" interposed Mabel earnestly. "How can you go on like this, when each of you lot es the other at heart better than all the world besides! Heaven knows that I ata not to blame" "I should think not," interpolated Fred, erick. "I never said you were," cried Julia, tear- ful, but still defiant. - "And yet I seem to myself," continued Mabel, "to be the mischief -maker between you two. I am very much obliged to you— very—for having asked me here ;but ()clear, 0 dear, how I wish I had never come I" Never was a sentiment more genuine, or wearing a more genuine air. Poor Mabel, as we are aware, had half-a-dozenreasons for regretting her 'visit to Shingleton besides the present disastrous occurrence, but this fact was unknown to her hearers ; and the .dis- tress that seemed wholly upon their account moved both exceedingly. "1 would go away directly, as I wished to go," she went an, "but that I do not like to leave you on such bad—I mean, while there is any mit-ander- standing between,.you. I aero but a girl'— and a very foolish, ignorant one, no doubt— still, it does seem to mesoshockuig, so need. less" (here she threw her arms about her sister's neck). "Oh, kiss him, Ju., and make it up ; do, pray, just as you and have often kissed and made up quarrels not more oliild- ish r, Such innocent eloquence. was irresistible. , The belligerents did not kiss, indeed, but Frederick held out hie hand with frankness, which Julia took and retained 'in both her own. • "Forgive me," said she ; " I was to blame for"-- " There is nothing to forgive, my dear,'in an act of folly," said he, a little stiffly. " One has only to make h4ete to forget it ; "no ;HMS" had arrived. from home that morning, which. was "good news") —were all dwarfed by the thought of that " good-bye for ever" she had whispered ill her heart but yesterday to Riclmrd, and which was celzotug still "fur ever," Ilow iniiuitely dearer did aro seen, I now that be was none ; dearer, too, for that sudden slackness which, she bail been unable to hide from herself, had taken place in Julie's affection for her. How she longed for one loving, faithful arm on which to lean? Well, there was at least her father's arm ; loving luta faithful it had alw ae s proved itself ; and if it was weakened now, r so much the better opportunity was offered to her to support and tend. him, and so re- pay its lifelong care. The bitterness of life { was surely past. If it had. no mare innocent joys to offer her, such as had pleased her once, it had loving duties that would bring 1 their comfort with them. So she reasoned—innocent, ignorant; Mabel ; just as some passenger itt a train, doomed to disaster, murmurs consolingly "This tunnel is dark, but we shall soon get to the end of it;" not knowing of the evil lurking in: the darkness, of the catas- trophe that is close at hand, and little guessing of the weary hours that will elapse before—bruised, and shattered, and " another man "—lie will once more wel- come the light of day. (To BE CONTIISTED. ) For Malmied Women only. Married women would do well to paste in their scrap books the following statistics, Compiled by an exchange, relative to a wo- man's work :.In one year a woman gets din- ner 365 times, washes the dishes 1,095 tines, gets the children ready for school twice a day for 180 days, gets the baby to sleep 1,460 times, makes about 300 calls, and as she wishes for something she hasn't every minute, she wishes 60 things an hour. Who says that a woman has nothing to do? Armed with such an array of facts any wife may calmly await the next time her husband tells her that her activity is limited in dur- ation and degree, and then simply paralyze him by quoting the figures. • Hayseed (taking his seat in a photograph- er's chair)—" Wait a minute. Don't you give nothing ?", Photographer -"What do you mean, sir?" Hayseed—"I'd like to take gas or chloroform, I'm a blamed poor hand to stand Bufferin'." The outbreak in Buenos Ayres has de pressed. the London stock exchange. . Argen- tine and Urugayan securities are practically unsaleable. Alcl. Ryckman, of Hamilton, has intro- duced in the city council aproposition to an- nex to the eotporation a considerable slice of the township of Barton.' 1 John H. Douglass, treasurer of the Knapp Stout Lumber Company, of St. Louis, has been arrested on a charge of killing Charles Dost, one of the company's employes. The cable announces that considerable feeling is aroused in St." Petersburg by -the statement ascribed to the king of Sweden,, that, while in the event of war between Germany and any other power he would re main neutral as long as possible, he would fight; if compelled to take part, on the side ' of Germany. This is regarded as a declara- tion of hostility, toward Russia, whom the Swedes have never forgiven for the annex - at ion of Finland. 1)..1; W. . J. G ,A A , 198 K�''tth.g Street West, Toronto, Onto TREATS CHRONIC DISEASES—and give e ' attention to SEM DISEASES, as Pimples, Clem, eta rinse PRIVATE DISEASES—and Diseases of a rira Nature, as impotency, Sterility, Varieocele ;Nervou e. bility. etc., (the result of, ua lee and Stricture of long stand youthful folly and oseess,j Meet g. DISEASES OF WOMEN --Painful, Profuse or Sn - prossed Meustrnation. Ulceration, Legeorrheee. Stud alP Displacements of the Womb, Office house --9 a.m to 8 p.m, hantlar3,1 p.m, to $ R.w.. Exeter Lumber Yard The Hntleraigned crushes to iafornuhepublio itt general that he keeps —constantly onstantly int stock— 1l KindsBUILDING O DRESSED OR UNDRESSED, large stock of Hemlock always on handl et mill pries. Floiritag. S5°t- ased--inch, inch-nnd•a uerter, inch -end -a, leaf and two inch. Sava 1)ugr., itsds, Mouldings said alt Finishing Material Lath =e. i$IfftiuL] S S ' , , la A Rk+l'tti.I,tT�.-•-4osaagietitit?n cttaAlptngyd, The }rest ani the largest stock, and at lowest ,prices. Shingles A 1. Heir wrs,:.ir; Aly sett, sal CI1 re ay ter use. Ala s?aree:'.ca aseered, & eaU n'ill bears out the above. Re. OLD ESTABLI:SIIND t� air, W , l .s l ina,.:?l� r E � T oa1 S.u nttew, slAg ta E dE c pe :YeR nw�laradvaaSC9to beginners. Stock aip IatC spottkiatieg- Vir iQiTIT MUM. int iitiCtif4i At !Rd:rr.tu, rming1l]RQ� $sats. Snr,eresmest, Toronto. OmC. lTila lose!brHlaDr.e w r19dos'?tip e*�' 1,'`mss.. G.p . 1st TV faaaiftetarel culv b'Thanaa,t I%4Lwa;, 7Q, 1ocs nxferl 3b-eet, l.a.o ,..51, t„ai. r1 Strctr, VIM JON Purchasers should 10511 to the Libel on the Bons and Pets. e address .ss not 533. Oxford Street, Laudon, they are spurious. D JOHN LABATT'S Indian Poe Ale arnr XX Brown Sf',uI Highest awaraa ani Medals' for Purity and Excel lenee at Centennial Exhibition, PMI adelphia, • 1876; Cauada, 1876 ; Australia, 1377 ; and Paris, France, 1878. TESTI\SONIA).S SELECTED: Prof. II H Croft. Public Analyst, Toronto, say at- "t And it to be perfectly sound containinguo impurities or adniter- atiox.s, and can strourlyrecourmend it as perfectly pure and a very superior malt Heuer,” John I3 Edweres,Professor of Chemistry, Montreal, says: And them to bo remarkably swine ales. brewed from puremalt and bops. Rev. P. r-.Ed.Page .1:Wie ser of Chemistry Laval Ile.vcr sity, pdebeo, says :-•'I Slave analysed the Indian Pale'4le manufactured bvJohuLabatt,Londan,Ontario, and have found it a lightale, containing but little alcohol, of a deli- cious flavor. and of a very agreeable taste and superior quality. and compares with the best imported aces. 1 have also analyzed tbe Porter XXX Stout, of the same brewery, whioh is of a cellent quality; its Sayer is very agreeable ; it is a tonic more energetic than the above ale, for it is a little richer Inalco1 oi, and don be compared advantage - Gaily with any imported article. ASK YOIT GEOCER FOR IT. eintzman MANUFACTURERS OF Co Grand, Square ? Upright PIA11T0FORTES. The Oldest Manufacturers in the Dominion. Seven Thousand . Pianos Now in Use. The Heintzman Pianos are noted for. 1I Their Full, Rich, Pure Singing Tone, Their' Finely Regulated Delicate Touch, Their Perfectly' E'en Well Balanced Seal : • The Whole Composed of the Choicest Material ` and of the Most Thorough Workmanship Send For Illustrated Catalogue. Factory . West Torolito 31111011011 W. aTAmnsed :."a