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The Exeter Times, 1890-12-18, Page 14CHRISTMAS TIDE; which belongs to Bacchus and to drunken delirium and excess, and the mistletoe, [which belongs to the Druidic worship and Although Christmas fails within the tree Ito scenes of gayer oral lighter cheer; those ditiouary mild, halcyon days, we atrw•ays; being generally ehosen, too, like the :holly, associate it in our minds with elear, frosty Mire laurel„ the spruce, and hemlock, that Weather, spotless snows, sparkling stars, i are perennially green and fresh. It is in no and bells that chime with as frosty ;a tickle jevent of reverence for the day that this cue - as the sparkle of the stats, Yet, of course, : toui was borrowed front the worship of other the weather has nothing whatever to do with so-called deities ; for the Christmas modes i theda_. sitce it haslargely our real acceptation of day, v, r o celebration were derived 1 from and 1. been celebrated all around •the year, itt,rn-kneaded with the ways of observing the March and in September, and siuce inn Ohl Saturnalia, which came at this period of equatorial regions it has to be accompanied by fans and coolers, and ices are more gate. ui there tli;►n the trece,ssa},y beearrse histerie plum-putldiug at its banquet table. the sun's course, and marked some tradi- tional era resembling its own, when golden Saturn reigned iu piping times of peace, when all teen loved each. other, rad sin and suffering were uuknown on earth, and in whose festivities tapers were lighted, ever - For Christmas, after all, has to find itsgreens were hung, slaves assumed purple best atmosphere in the heart ; and whether ! tunics and white togas and caps of freedom, it falls tinder the patronage of hood old gen, land masters waited on them, and all was erous St. Nicholas or under that of the good -will and good cheer, Ohrist Child—the Christ-Kindlein that has become liriss Hringle—the acknowledgment of its beauty and preciousness leas to spring out spontaneously, as the blossoms of that Glastonbury thorn which is said to be the grafi of Joseph of Arimathea used to do when tie time of the year came round to the sacred birth, and aroma m it the blossoming impulse. Wherever the heart itself welcomes the coming of Christmas it males no olds whether the day is ushered lie in with the singing of carols or with t t burning of gunpower, as the habit is in some portions of our Southern country. It is in this spirit and atmosphere of good- will and good cheer that our Christmas greetings and our Christmas gifts are made.. And while We make them, do we never pause and reflect as to whether we have se- cured anything to offer the Master of the festival Himself ? The kings of the East brought Him gold and frankincense and myrrh, but others in this fatter day, what have they brought for Hint? What gift; for Mist, then, bring ye with the re- t 'Your hands 'ewe v. ori ed well, Is your courage spent In handuor!. only have you uotbinl; hest \\"hick generous ooh may perfect anti present, !ud lit ;hall thank. the givers for? No light tit teaching. liberal nations. for the neer Who sit in d:u knees when it is not night? No cure for wicked children? Oh, no cure, No hello for women eobbinu out of sight And who is there that has not a welcome Because tinea made the faws d" for Clnristnnas 2 Even he who considers And what gifts have we as individuals, as religion as belonging to the region of the unknowable, tants tlieregarils all religions events, must feel the contagion of the gen- eral joyfulness, and be glad, one would trains:, of the day. If he is not, let him pause and think of what it is that the in- fluence of the day has brought about and established. let Trim picture the state of ST' SUGGESTIf,1�S. the world before the dawn of that first l'ltrist- mas Day of all-- its oppressions, its barbar- ity, its slavery, its poverty beyond speech here, its wealth beyond dreams there, its indifference to human life and distress, i.� Somebody says that'[ to read, to think, to cruelty, its ignorance, its sin ; and then. let! love, to give, to piny, are the five great joys him leak at it now, with its concern for the of life, and it see=s to me that if the hearts race, its outlook for the poor, its enthusiasm of toilers are to be lifted,itmust be on these for humanity, its freedom tor nati°rns, its wings, eines they are the only ones that can bear our. sittl'er:ing, sinning, struggling l um - alleviations; of suffering, its vast enlighten' anity above the sadness of earth and earthly stent, its penetration into the great secreta; conditions, and into the sweet blue of heav- of the eostnos, its endeavor after righteous- enly arms and aspirations, pure, innocent, mess ; let laitnn remember that where we dial', unselfish lives. By one or the other of them seals are daily lifting or being lifted out of not know ao much as the nature of the cloud, the morass of temptation, the slough of des - now we know that of the stars ; where we pond, the clay of seltishuee.s, the horrible pit wallowed in the senses, now we search the of despair, the quicksand of doubt, the waves Mystery of life ; where we grovelled, now of adversity, into places of light, warmth. asafety, art3 can nst nreathe we fly ; let him remember all his, and thenand then outhe content, and then ask if this day ami its eause is not one of "walk and leap, and praise God," like the those gifts concerning which the apostle sufferer at the ttle.tatsuit (late uponiwhom St, said, as lever god aft and ever perfect Peter fixed his eyes. This Beautiful (sate, 5 g g 'j P out of which the acts come until they have gift cometh from above," girdled the world, swings open with the One of the great scientists of the period c awn of every day, and we could no more has said that when he attempts to give the live on this catch without the aid of these power manifested in the universe a Warne ministering spirits than we could without jective the sane" Their blessing, their rewards are it evades him, declines to be made ob I as much the heritage andprivilege of tiro and he is overshadowed by its mystery. poor as of the rich. l`'e are not told what But in the same way, it has been pointed tit. Peter got in exchange for his gift—the out, the beloved disciple said, "The light widow for her unite. I have often thought thee ahineth in darkness, and the darkness com- g dealing with our toilers,es with the poor generally—(I speak with respect, bear- prehendeth it not." And they who hold with ing in mind that there are the poor -rich, St. John, feel that this light, this power, whom none can nrakewealthy, and the rich• this being, does not evade search or decline, male twlw great mom none istakes; we n reduce to p give at once recognition, but taking on human life has too little and too much ; we dnot get a given us reason for rejoicing in tho gift of fair exchange, and I; m not now speaking, Christmas Day, finding that there is no of course, of a commercial quid pro quo, but of that just and honorable equivalent ren - greater miracle in that act of taking on hu- dered for every rghteous act and translation man life than in the fact of the existence of between man and roan—not the mere money' life itself—life, of which a great religious giving of some busy idler and the servile has said : " We know not what it' gratitude of some poor creature with a live- thinkerey sense of past privations and favors to is, how it comes or goes, and most innper- come, but the tender "Ioving kindness of fectly has the keenest and most patient one soul and the sweet thankfulness of an - human scrutiny been able to trace even the other that so often confuse the angel that records the deeds of them that love their mode of operation. In itself and all the fellow men, so that the debit and credit ac - varied modes of its operation it is the stand- counts are quite hopelessly mixed. Where ing miracle of the universe, the most won- does the indebtedness lie, for instance,when derfnl of all the forces working in the realm a gentlewoman who is rich out of the depths of some loss or cross finds it put into her of nature." And thinking thus of the day heart to pay the rent of some other gentle - as the one that marks and accentuates the woman who is poor and burdened utterly great gift of life and being to every individ- beyond her strength with cares`and children nal, as well as of the holy life and being in and sickness and what not, and sees honest tears in the faded, tear -dimmed eyes of an whose remembrance it is instituted, they honest woman, and hears her say : " Oh, would keep it in a selfish seclusion who ma'am it seems like a dream,and I can sleep nowat night," they exchange honest were not glad to have humanity of all nations and of every belief recognize what- handshake? Can we not then all learn how to ever they can in the day, welcoming them irrespective et oto f all tive he accidentse five oreat f birth,s of 1po- to it as they would welcome all people to sition and fortune ? We must first get be- rme hospitable hearth. The very fact of the fore we can give, of course. And there is custom that has been chosen for one of the individual and associated effort. There is reading. With the well-to-do chief secular features of the day's observance this is apt to revolve itself into a question of —the making of gifts, the relieving of want, personal preference and indulgence, but have the carrying to each other all the gladness we not all heard of libraries generouslygiven the earth has to offer—shows the feeling of reacting rooms opcued for the use of all tivhich offers the freedom of the daytoall respectable men anwomen. I know a good woman who has given years of her life and who will join in its festive spirit. taken endless trouble to weed out hurtful Let Christmas come how and where it and vicious books and papers from the poor will, it speaks of the value of life, and so homes and lodging -houses of one of our great cities and replacing them with others both of humanity ; to the 1?eliever, of the value pleasant and profitable, and with astonish - of that humanity for which the great author ing success. I know a charming girl of 15 and principle of life could leave the heaven who reads to "dear old nurse every even- oorold dear is too tire of heavens, and into which he could stoop , gett interesteclhin anything all by herself.& to the unbeliever, at least of the value of I know another who faithfully reads aloud that humanity for which Christianity has to a Chinese girl whose parents first put out done so much more than any other known her eyes in order to beg alms for her, and agency, and he need not hesitate to cele- hen sold her for 25 cents. But I am glad to say that I also know a brats the day as that of the birth, if not of very poor girl who has learned to love good the great precept "that ye love one another," books, and bought out of her scanty earn - yet of the great forceful application of the ings the "Imitation" and "Maxims of St. precept, and he can let the wreath adorn Francis de Sales," andread them too, bit by bit, to a dreaclful unhappy, lonely old semp- his window, the garland be hung above his stress, who had not a relative on earth, nor door, and he can load his children with gifts, a penny laid by after a long lite of patient, and help on the joy of the clay with the hest faithful labor, and saw only old age and the of them. We have heard it said that o workhouse before her, with this beautiful result. One day the poor soul said to her : late many Hebrews celebrate Christmas , "You needn't read any more Tel do it my - and we clo not know why they should find self in future, I am old, deaf, poor, alone that difficult to -day, were it only regard for in the world. It doesn't matter, Goci is sufficient. I have learned .that from you their own race from which such great things and your books." She did not dream that sprang. St. Theresa used the very same words, "God It isperhaps an acknowledgment of this is sufficient," having got thein from the very same .source. And I amglad to saythat I mystery and principle of life, especially. as Christ's acceptance and ex erience"of human hear of her now as being a perennially cheer- Christ'spfui and contented person -and all becanse a life, presents it, that we dress our churches 'girl, herself poor and busy, took the time and houses with wreaths and garlands of and trouble to shout a few sentences at a sveigreenn—symbol& of life and of deathless time, whenever she could, down the ear - life --excluding no other than that ivytrumpet of a very deaf and disagreeable old greentwomere children, as servants? And in what far or near Christmas is it that each one of us all shall have burned away the dross of self, and shall give to the source and cause of all our Christmas the perfeet gifts of love and sacrifice? eine Bate, or heaping Others to have a nappy Christmas, "SALVE!" 'rite First Christmas Selig itt. Tite Siew World, [Trac ' Salve Regina" was sung each evening on Olt:, ship of Columbus during the outward voyage, and among the West Indian Islands,l 'Twas dusky eve ; The cooling shadows tell upon the sea ; The fevered heats went upward with the tide ; And faint end fair the ocean vedette lay Amid the golden irises that gleamed About the dying alters of the sea. The Viceroy rase, And stood in silence on the level deck Of the slow -drifting caravel. The breeze The soft Castilian banner long had left, And lateen sails, and breathless were the air i And sky and sea, The Viceroy gazed Far o'er the palmy isles and rosy deep. A flood of thoughts like angels came to him, And filled his kindled soul with rapturous faith, And turned his drains to words: "Twas such a night In old Genoa on the breathless quays, I saw the evening stars hang low, and there I seemed to see tete world among them hang, Andthennrethoughtthe earth was WOO, star, And not a keel had broken half itsseas. t"Twas such a .night---. I was a boy ; the old e.tthetleal snug Behind are on the hills, and low the bells In eautpaniles were played. And then I wept, I know not why, as faded one by one The light in priories and convent towers, Silence was everywhere.... silence and Col. "Then Cod spoke low to my young sans, And tilled my being with prophetic joy, 'Trust in the Hand that holds the earth,' he said, And follow Me across the silent sea.' And so I followed year by year the Voice ; Au exile from my native shores I went, Alone and friendless, by the learned. scorned, Jeered even by the children in the street; A crust my bread in journeys far and long; The earth my bed ',meth Audalusian moons But holding fact my faith as 1 do now, Then forth went upon the unknown waves, I walked by faith the Saragossa Sea, And saw an last the land bird's purple wing, And ht the new creations of the World I set the gross of Leon and Castile. 11y heart' is full.... The Southern: Guttas Uplifts its jewelled hand to blesa the deep Iu yon horizon, shadowy and low. The canvas seemly atirs.,.,tbc Indian lights Burn faint in spicy groves along the shores. Silence is everywhere silence and God. "Hail, love -lit stars, That fill the arches of the domes on high, And light the wide placidity of sea ! Your beams .reveal the vessel's hallowed name, .Vanda Marks. , ..let me breathe it law. This is the night of the Nativity. ':Maria,' whom all nations bless call.. Jess, whose love inspired my earlyyonth, , .. Oh, I have known celestial company ! God told to me the secret of the sea, And sent me forth to be His messenger ; And now I know tho earth to be a star, And know that Jesu is the Star of earth. Tears fill my eyes ; my soul is filled with praise. " Wake, sailors, wake ! Each eve in all our voyage across the sea We've sung the vesper hymns of old Genoa. This is, the night that hails the Star of stars. Sing once again, 0 mariners of Spain, The Star that leads tins on o'er seas unknown; The Star thatlights the undiscovered worlds; The mystic Star thatled Ephrata The royal sandals of the feet of gold. " Here, on the prow, I'll stand Lifted above you ; ye shall sing below ; Sing in these now celestial atmospheres, While burns the Cross of Stars above the sea, And I will listen with bowed tread, and join In the ' Amen,' as I have ever joined Since first I heard that sweet and holy hymn In boyhood, long ago." The song arose, The first sweet Christmas Ave ever sung Beside the cradle of the new-found world ;— "Ave, Maris Stella, Star forever fair, Light of hope immortal In the heavenly air. Star of stars, and Light Eternal, Lead us on across the sea. Salvo ! salve ! we are exiles From the world, but not from Thee. Salve !salve ! " Ave, Maris Stella, Help our weak endeavor, Till, redeemed by Jesu, We are thine forever. Star of stars and Light Eternal, Lead us on across the sea. Salve 1 salve ! we are exiles From the world, but not from Thee, Salve ! Salve 1 " Now to God, all glorious, One, and Blessed Three, On the land and ocean Endless glory be ! Salve ! salve ! Amen!" So sung the men. The palm -trees stood baptized with heavenly dew ; The mountain shadows gloomed the distant skThe sir er rain fell misty from the moon. Hispaniola's jewelled caciques heard, And it may be the herald angels bent Shadowless there, o'er the pellucid. sea, To catch the echoes of their own sweet harps, That o'er the shepherd tents of Bethlehem's plain First broke the waiting silence of the world. Then slept the crew Beneath the palms of God, and crystal Night Led on her lambent army of the stars. The Viceroy stood alone, as when iu youth He walked the star -lit quays of old Genoa. He felt again the old prophetic joy, And trod. the vessel with a firm -set step. And then he slowly spake with lifted face, And broke the odorous stillness of the air : " I've trusted in the Hand that holds the world, And followed God across the silent sea." Ilezn eser BuTTL+RwOnTII. A V)rluable Leeson. Sunday School Teacher—" And when the l' wicked children continued mocking the good prophet two she bears came out of the mountain and ate up forty of the wicked children. Now, boys, what lesson does this teach us?" Jimpsy Primrose—" I know, Teacher—"Well, Jimpsy?" Jimpsy Primrose—"It teaches us how many children a she bear can hold." WE WISH YOU y Christazas a XD 3itsppyk o'er' Ireardo And the above is only secured in caring properly for others as well as ourselves. Wishes are of no effect unless put into practice, and now we think it fitting at this time to retuzn thanks to our numerous customers, wXio have so kindly given us a share of their patronage during the past fourteen years ofour business career. Duren that time many of them have stood by us while the businessg y �' world has passed through � financial crisis— DEPR.ESSION TJNEa. UNEQUALLED, in the history of business Irma. Bankruptcies by the thousands can fie enumerated men once considered wealth y arta SV Q' WED NcrrX11 COMITIOZI.TS, have been brought low by misfortune's cruel hand, or by mismanagement. or trusting to others entirely unworthy, they themselves unft to manage the ship of state; and to say that we are sorry, will not glace these men m their former positions, But we will t to SHUN TI E POCK upon which they wrecked, This town has froiu the commencement of our business rela- tions with the citizens of Exeter and hulrrounding country, been visited with BANKRUPT STOCKS, MERCHANDISE Of Every Hind has been sold. There has not been a branch of trade but has been affected' for a time and healthy business is almost a thing of the past, But we still survive, and are thankful to our many patrons who have so kindly dealt with us during those inducements and attractions, --promising unheard of bargain.s. We are, as heretofore, prepared to plane before our customers good Goods --to be sold on their merits --Pgromia- ing our best attention to all desirous of purchasing, supply urchasin, We have a full su of f' OC ISMICS t*Z6 s ;>.t SAS VISSAIXIM all departments fully represented by the latest goods such as DRY GOODS, READY-MADE CLOTHING, (more especially Men's and Youths' Overcoats) BOOTS AND SHOES, RUBBER GOODS, CROCKERY, GLASSWARE, WALL -PAPER, E'O. Again soliciting a share of your patronage, and wishing all a Merry Christm#s and R Happy New Year, Exeter, Dec. 17, '90. I am, Yours Truly, al Pi CLARIC ei A Startling Oontradletion. To the Editor of the Exeter Tinter. Dean Stn,—There is an old adage that says " a prophet is not without honor save in his own country," and the saying is generally accepted es containing much truth. Indeed it is expanded .into the gen- erally accepted belief that true merit, whether it be that of an individual. or that of some medicinal preparation, is much mere likely to meet with popular approval at a distance than nt home. Nasal Balm, acknowledged as being the greatest remedy for cold in the head and catarrh,ever offered the people of Canada, affords a striking instance of the feet that popular opinion, for once at least, is wrong. From the out set its popularity in the home of its mann- facture bas been unbounded and constantly increasing. In evidence cf this we offer testimonials from two Brookville gentlemen who are known throughout the Dominion. D. Derbyshire, Esq., Mayor of Brock- ville, for the past year President of the Ontario Creamery Association, gays : Your Nasal Balm is truly a wonderful remedy. I may say that I was afflicted with a dis- tressing case of catarrh, accompanied by a number of its disagreeable symptoms. I had tried other remedies. but without avail, and well nigh dispaired of a cure, when I was induced to give Nasal Balm a trial. Its effects were wonderful, and the results arising from its use surprising Briefly stated, it elope the dropping into the throat, sweetens the breath, relieves the headache that follows catarrh, and in fact makes one feel altogether like a new man. No one who is suffering from catarrh in any of its stages should lose a moment in giving this remedy a trial. James Smart, Esq ,Brockville, Sheriff of the United counties of Leeds and Gren- ville, says : It would be impossible to speak to extravagantly of the wonderful curative properties of Nasal Balm. I suf- fered for upwards of a month from a severe cold in the head, whioh despite the use of other remedies, was becoming worse and developing into catarrh. I procured a bottle of Nasal Balm and was relieved from the first application and thoroughly cured within twenty four house. I cheerfully add my testimony to the yalue of Nasal Balm. These are but two illustrations out of the hundreds of testimonials the proprietors of Nasal Balm have bad from all parts of the Dominion, but they ought to convince the most skeptical. If your dealer does not keep Nasal Balm it will be sent on -e ceipt of pride -50 coots small size and $1 large size bottle -by addressing FIJISOAD & Co, Brookville, Ont. 4,000,000 ISILEs—In a life of 70 years the blood travels 4,000,000 miles. If im- pure and unhealthy it oarries diseas with it Purify your blood with B B B. 1 was nf, night and day with a bad arm, and could find mouse from doctors' medi- cine so I took two bottles of B B B, which cured me: MIes GZATIE CHtrndu, Alymer, Ont. MOTHER AND ease—Gentlemen.—I have used Hagyard's Pectoral Balsam for a bad sough, and was oared by one bottle. My babe only two months old also had a Bold and eongh and on giving his some it help - cd him very mach. Ides F J Gamine, Florence, Ont. A. BBNEFICENr' DISCOVERY. THE NOBLEST ACHIEVEMENT OF SCIENCE The iron horse, witn its tireleee strength, its pulses of vapour and its heart of flame, is a glorous exponent of the oteatiVa capac- ity of the human mind; and the metallio nerves through whioh intelligenoe courses over a continent prove by every 'flash of thought whioh traverses them that man possess one attrubute essentially grand,the power to annihilate space and time. But vast and important as have been the results of making steam and lightning the oommon carrier and messenger of the world, the discovery by whioh weak or impure blood can be vitalized or restored to now vigour and purity by' means of internal and exter- nal remedies is of infinite value. The re- sources of vegetable chemiatry as developed and applied by Thomas Holloway have proved equal to this mighty task. His famous remedies impart to the stream of life a disinfeoting principle which frees the system from all impure and poisonous ele- ments. The powers of chemistry are al- most beyond calculation, and as he has brought them to bear upon all the verities of disease in those invaluable vegetable compound known as Holloway's Pills and Ointment, they have compassed their high- est and holiest object, Steam. as the great motor, is a aubsidary agent. Its usefulness consists, mainly in conveying substantial benefits, with speed and certainty, to the fields in which they are to operate. It is simply- the bearer of blessings, not their originator. Of all the freight which it carries over land and sea, there is perhaps none so preoioue as Hol- loway's remedies. It is scarcely a figure of speech to say that whithersoever it conveys them it flies "with healing on its wings." Under the influence of the Ointment, the skin, however disfigured by eruptions or exoresenoes, becomes a tabula rasa, pure, spotless and transparent ; and this erasure of blemishes is not accomplished by driving back disease into the vital remises of the system but by neutralizing the morbid ma- terial whioh feeds it. The Pills act upon the internal fluids and the organs whioh secrete thein upon the sanitary principle. They destroy the acid particles subjected to their chemical action, as infallibly as an alkali neutralizes an acid ; and at the same time impart a mild and constant eleotrin action to the secretive and excretive machinery. The sanction of governments, the pat• ronage of princes, the approval of all Christian nations, the gratitude of pagan I millions attest the value of these twin cur. atives. In fact there is no region with Iwhioh England or any country has any oonimeroial intercourse where Holloway would not rind himself at home. Some es- timete may be formed of the extent and variety of hie foreign correspondence, from the fret that sixty corresponding clerks, of whioh number, sixteen are accomplished linguists, are employed in conducting it.. He is the centre of a sanitary circle whish belts the world. -laity Republic. A S000aIBFUL . MISSION—The medical mission of Burdoek Blood Bitters in airing sonetipalion, has been markedly enceeseful; No other ` remedy possesses such peculiar power over this disease. Was very bad with eoetiwears•n d 1 f B B , one bott e o 13 t Lowed me* wesld fast be without it, rays Children Cry for Pitcher's C iortat Yoe wig Funny, in., sf Bobeayreen, OMs. s, $75o OOTTAC} 3 (nits equivalent in cash will bo given to the person detesting the greatest numberof arrors, (words wrongly spelled or misplaced) in the will be given two cashkprizes9 of $200 addition four of one $100, eight of *50, ton of $25 twenty-five of $10,Illty of -$5, one hundred of $2, and one hundred and. fifty of ail, distributed in the order mentioned in rules and regula- tions, whtob will be sent with a copy of De• oembsrissue on receipt Of 15 cents in stamps. Spcoialoashprizes given away almost every day during competition whioh closes February let, 1891. Maros, Our homes Publishing Cs., Brwpk- vllls, Canada. Just why so many people suffer pain wbon a remedy of known and certain effect like Hagyard's Yellow Oil may be had at every drug store, is not very clear. This peerless pain soothing remedy is a prompt and pleasant cure for sore throat, group, colds, rheumatism, lame back, etc. Price 25 cents. EASILY c&troir—Croup, colds, sore throat and mons painful ailments are easily caught in this changeable climate. The never failing remedy is just as easily ob. tained in Hagyarde Yellow Oil, which is undoubtedly the best of all the many reme- dies offered for the cure of wide or Heins. CE7L A FLAG FOS ] Oi1It SCHOOLHOUSE The movement for hoisting the ("median flag on the schoolhouses on anniversaries of noted events in our history is spreading rapidly throughout thn Dominion and evoking the hearty npprovnl of all patriotic citizens. Al- ready Ie �!�j4 tapirs hon •,bite its share in helning on this movement. toy awarding a handsome flag' to one school in •ach rnautty of Ontario, but the number of en- pairios from all ppart,& of the Dominion as to low flags can be obtained by other schools has letermined the publishers of THE HOPiS% to offer a handsome CANADIAN FLAG ,1 beet bunting. 12 feet long (regular price $15). ,s a premium for 30 Mew yearly subscribers to oho h'EEnLY EMPIRE at 51.410 or eight new dearly subscribers to THE AVIA' 161.11PlitL 55 annum, or propo, ting of each, ono it ubseription to Dalla y oouuting for 1+01111 ylWeskiisencr. Every school, in tbo Dominion ought to have a national flair, and this offor presents an op- portunity for each obtaining k without cost. and wlittlerouble• e` hwho are iaxeith rleted to golfitng s Sag Lfote tbtsiroso school-, house juin fat gau:ag up a club. and whish sub-. scribers get full value for their money in the best newspaper in the 'Dominion, the school sbtnine it Sag FREE OF cossuo The HIIBkLt EiitlstE has recently bees, enlarged to twelverums. and ie now, witbent` doubt. the ieet wee ,new apes in Canada• whilst the iepuiatism of TAN DAILY I.IIPIi6' as th.leading meentog journal' at the Dods.. ys, is wadi h awn., tBead tpr ars N ewd sla bete, nti:Oe fa #rtetd t�iedacak • .;