" i-fk^ if •J T«»ICS FOB WOMKN. A Sesreity of First-Claas Terysielureaa Artlsta. "Oh." said MUe. Aogaata Solilke. the enoe faxorite danaeu^e of the Empress Euge- nie, noir a directpr of the ballet at a Phila- delphia theatre: "It has been ac long since I learned to dance that I have forgot- ten when I took my first lesson. Lacille (Irahn, one of tfce most famous dancers in Europe, was my teacher. My father did not like danseuscs very much, but I was boond to learn, and as mother made no opposition I recaived my lessons in private. Five, six and seven boars practice every day. Tnink of it:" and she raised her hands and eyed her toes as if recalling the suffering they had caused her. "That was work, wy dear tir. Girls won't do it now. That is the reason there are so few great dancers American girls would â- lake the most superb dancers in the world, but they are lazy." The experienced prem- iere shuddered over the laziness of novices in this country. "They practice an hour and then come to y.u with tears in their eyes and say 'Oh, madame, my feet are killing me 1' A dancer's aching feet never killed her," added Mile. Sohlke, in a way that admitted no contradiction. "Then they complain that their legs ache. To be sure they ache, but that is what de- velopes them and makes them beautiful. Poor ninnies, they never think of that. Oh, these have too many other things on their minds. They have sweethearts and all that sort of thing, and they forget their art. " J-jiglish girls are fully as lazy as Ameri- cans, but they have such tender toes. A dancer's toes should never get tired if she loves lier art. No one ever hears that the fineers of a great piano player are stiff and sore, that he is unable to play, do they 1" Well, a dancer's toes should be like a piano player's fingers. German girls are, as a rule awkward and lazy; The Italian and French make the best dancers. The French are not afraid to work and they are general- ly graceful. "Are dancers long liv^d ;â- " said MUe. Sohlke, repeating the question and laughing before she answered. "Certainly they are notedly so. To be a good dancer one must be temperate and have good habits. Having plenty of exercise, their appetites are £;ood and tdey must take rest or they could not dance. Taglioni, the father of the famous dancer Alarie, was the ballet master at the Grand Opera House in Berlin when he was ninety years of age. Oh, you may depend upon it, dancers Jive toaripe old age if they take caie^f theinsclvos." â€" Philadelphia Rec- ord. The Origin of Bajags. arious stories are told of the sources irom which the present fashion of wearing the hail- bangod is derived. Off-color ladies if China are credited with starting the style, and more than one authority has traced it to the Uuchess of Portanioutli, the favorite of Cliarlcs 11. of England. If pictures are be depended upon, however, (harless II. himself started the fashion long before he was old enough to know anything about the fair lady lie admired, for there in his por- trait still, in some feminine girii, he is shown with his ha'r cut short iii front, as ladies now wear their bangs. Let us not be too severe upon. ba.ugs, nor the girls who wear them. They are the tribute from youth to age, fjr while bmgs prevail, no one need ever be bald. Look at any oldtime engraving where boys are rc- prescuted, and you will see them with their hair cut straight across the frort, or i: you have ever seen an Irish gossoon, you will bud he, too, wears his hair banged. Indeed, banging the hair is au Irish fish- ion, and goes as far back as the strugide of the Iri;li i-f the pi^o in the tiuie of James I. ot F.iig'.aii.l. siuji t hair in front and long locks i.'eluiid ua., the distinctive mark of nation liity, and identified with the adlier- tuts ot the old leligioj. "VVlieu traits of dress Mere swept away by the advancing enlightenment, the bangs survived in the l:)'.ver oi-dtrs, and in the grooming of doga an.l liorsjs. The lady-love of an" English spoitiiig gentleman borrowed the fashion noni one of his favorite horses, noticing that the shading of the face by the hair gave the aniiual's eves a softer expression, and so its ccliv^es roll from pole to pole. It is alleged that banging t!ie hair and wearing it over the f rehead has a decidedly hygienic influ- ence, preventing cold setting in the head, .ind averting the pains of neuralgi i. almost change Marriage. -Marriage is, of all earthly unions, tiie only one permitting of no but that of death. It is that engagement in which mm exerts his most awful and solemn powerâ€" the poner of responsibility which belongs to him as one that shall give account â€" the power of abnegating the right to change, the power of parting with hi3 freedom, the power of doing that which m this world can never be reversed. And yet it is that relationship which is apokcn of most frivolously and entered into most carelessly and wantonly. It ii not .% union merely between two creatures, it is a union between two spirits and the intention of that bond is tj perfect the natur j of both, by supplementing their character with the force ot contrast, giving to each sex those excellencies in which it is naturally de- ficient to the one strength of character and firmness of moral will, to the other sym- pathy, meekness, tenderness. And just .so solemn, and just so glorious as these ends are for whicfi the uiuon was contemplated and intended, just so terrible are the conse- quences if it be perverted and abused for there is no earthly relationship which has so much power to enoble and exalt. self acquainted with their especial vaoitiea, with the ruscj to which they resort to attract raoi, with their envyil^ and jeal- OMve», with tiie naes they make of om amotber as drcoys, with th3 schemes of match- oiaking mammas, with their mstfaods of nh faiinitiyr social distinction and secorint; admiration, awl expnee them mercilessly. ' He only trouble is, they would all end by adoring him that is why it is essential that he should be old, and have a wife and large (amily. CUKI9U5 An F£.^TURES LIF£. OF ACTUAL Xngllsbman Nailed ta a Fla (cstaff and Exposed to a Tropical ^nn. A story that has just reached this countr from the Niger illustrates the cruelty an lawlessness which prevailed in that regio and we fear also in other West African riy ers not under the government of any civil ized State. It appears that Mr. U. H. Ben nett, who is described as an intelligent an d educated native of Sierra Leone, acted as the representative of a French house at a place called Loko, where he had pur- chased large quantities of ivory from the na- tives, and carried on other profitable busi- me 8. The general agent for the French firm on the Niger, M. Mattel, is also the French Consul on that river. It i;3 said that he en- tertained some suspicion as to the existence of irregulaiities in Mr. Bennet's mode of conducting business. He was of course per- fectly entitled to inquire into the proceed- ings of the sub-agent, and if he thought fit, to prosecute him in the consular courts. But, according to the Lagos Times, Ben- nett was arrested by a party of four French men armed with revolvers, and in a state of semi-nudity beaten and carried on board a French ship where he was handi uffed and made fast to one of the masts. On the arrival of the unfortunate man at the town of Lokoja he was lashed to a flagstaff. His handcuff's were not removed, and his suffer- ings under the fierce heat of a tropical sun were so great that, in the language of an eye-witness, "all who saw pitied him, and not a few of the n.itives wept." The Mohammedan Governor of the town was so moved by indignation that he com- pelled the Frenchmen to remove their pris- oner to a shed, where, however, hs was de- nied the protection of a mosquito net which a friendly native desired to place at his dis- posal. It furthers appears that, although these events occurred during the first days of October, six weeks later he still remained a prisoner, without having undergone either examination or trial. Fcr years past there have been many complaints of lawlessness on the part of Europeans trading in the Niffer, and of a disposition to punish prisoners first and try them afterward. It is, however, unfortunatdy, very seldom that the public receive so clear and connect- ed a statement of the facts as is forthcoming in the present instance. NEWS IN A NTJTSHa)j. Devon Cattle. Coi.. M, C. Weld writes as follows -imerican A'jricuUurint for February in Ther PrcadUsfi; at Women. is no fear of women not going to chnrch to hear themselves preached at, as io the case of men. No matter how faith- fully the preacher puts the points oa the is, they will flock to l^ten to him. They like it. The harder he hits, the more they will go. They all have consciences, and it pro- duces a sort of pleasurable pain to have them rudely s'uaken. An able disquisition on dress would attract crowds. The preach- er might discourse on toumeors, denounce the fashion of san manches, and enter even nto more minute details of underclothing, suggesting additions, and so forth, with the best possible effect. He should make him- One v\ hi sees a herd of Devocs for the first tiuis is struck with their extraordinary baauty and uniformity, and sees at once that they differ from every other breed, or stock of cattle with which he is acquainted, luey are of a brilliant, rich mahogany red, without white upon the body, but with white switches to their tails, and frequently with white udders. Though heavy in car- cass they are light- limbed and the older cows low-set. Their heads are small and clean-cut, elegantly placed and carried high, while they are adorned with long, light, tapering white horns, curving upward and outward. Their throats are clean withers thin necks free from dewlaps chests very wide, and briskets projecting and hung low. In girth they are large for their height very thick through the heart, and unequal- led in the crops, which po'nt carries the fullness of the shoulders back to the ribs without perceptible depression. The backs are very level from the withers to the set- ting of the tails, which are long and deli- cately tapered. Ti:e lains are wide and muscular the hips wide apart, the back I long to the rump, while the thighs are long I to the hocks, and in the twist well letdown, yet in the lower parts they are thin, giving room between them for capacious udders. The sofli flanks are usually very low, giving the Larrels a cylindrical, level look upon the under line. Devons are commonly heav- ily coated, and the air is wavy, if not posi- tively curly, in many cases. The skin is plastic and mellow under the touch, even when the animal is in low condition, but when in good order it is typically fine, not thin and papery, but elastic and yielding under the pressure of the finger tip.'«, and offering a mobile, unctuous handful if grasp- ed over the ribs. The skin color varies, but not a few sho*- a rich cream color, inclining to orange under the fore-arm, and in the ears. Add to this description that the legs are short, emall-bontd and clean, that the whole carriage and style are elastic and graceful, with a promptness and energy rarely seen iu neat cattle, while the large lively yet placid and fearless eye, indicates at once intelligence, confidence and repose and we have apicture of a high-bred, beauti- ful and useful race of cattle, such as has no equal anywhere. The oxen are much trained, very quick in their movements fast walkers and untiring workers, cows are deep milkers. Scmmmrf .f Farel«Zl»««»«»« â- "U^" ItM»-Co«clse, Wtiiy a»d Fwlated. DOMESTIC. Hon. George Ck)nture has been for th© eleventh time elected Mayor of Levis. The anniversary meetings of ProtMtant societies have been in progress in Montreal. Afire occurred in Lawry's packing-house, Hamilton, caused by overheating. Mr. George Gosnel, residing near Hisih- gate, was killed by a falling tree. " Damage to the value of $500 was done to the Lwer town market at Ottawa, by fire. Three men emploj^d in the Lindsay Paper Mill have been gferiously scalded. Thomas Brady, tinsidith, has been arrest- ed at Hamilton for committing a burglary at the Ontario Cancing Wprks. John Newton, for embezzling from H. H. Date, of Hamilton, whUe working for him as a clerk, has been arrested. The market-hoase, J. W, Barry's hide and tallow shop, and the fiie hall at Brad- ford, have been burned. No traces of Mrs. Daken, who mysteri- ously disappeared at Annapolis, N.S., have been discovered. A Scotch forger in Edinburgh, having ab- sconded, is being aeai-ched for at Montreal. His name is Peddie, atd his forgeries amount to $22,000. Mrs. F. L. Barufather, of Hamilton, was using a crochet hook, and by some unac- countable means the hook went in between the finger and thumb, causing lockjaw. A delegation of two members of the Melist* tribe of Indians, of New Bruns- wick, have arrived in Ottawa on business connected with the interests of t^eir people. The medical faculties of Montreal are about to petition the Government to enforce the existing lawaso as to compel the hospi- tal authorities to give up unclaimed corpses for dissection. As Francis McCarthy, of Beeton, was felling a tree it lodged in a smaller one, spliniering it, and causing it to fly back and strike him, severing one of his arms, and pinning him to the ground. CyiTED STATES. McFerron and Mcintosh, Pittsburgeis, have arranged a prize fight for $500 a side. U. S. Minister Logan's recall from Peru is expected, because of his letter written to Montero. Dr. Louis Schade, of Buffalo, was for a number of years surgeon on the steamsh'p Cimbria, â- recently sunk The Marquis of Lome, and party, arriv- ed at Washington last night over the Alex- an iria and Fredericksburg railroad. Considerable excitement has been caused at Bay view, Wis., by the discovery thas a drug clerk has bsen seeing aconi'e for whiskey. H. M. S. Dido, 12 guns, 2,520 tons, Capt. Domvillo, sailed from Charleston, S. (J., for Bermuda, beiring the Princess Louise. At Big Rapids Turnkey Shaw was sum- moned to a part of the jail containing three desperadoes, when they turned on him, beat him, and escaped. A teams'er named Charles Bardwell was driving across the Grand Trunk railway track at Port Huron, when a Detroit pas- senger train dashed into his waggon. He was killed. GENERAL. Flotow, the composer, is dead. Lord Greville is dead, aged G2. He was a Liberal. Oar indnstry, has htth uiteipt VicehConsoI aar Industry |i(| Japan. Iga of this ioiiMitant ChineM • the BrUiahlruie Journal. been so Upoited that special to tba leiifthy rapoft^f of-ffakodato, upon «te Richard Deasy, Lord Jus'.ice of Appeal in Irelandj is dangerously ill. Dora Henninger, the singer, reported lost on the Cimbria, is at Paris. The Porte has again promised the intro- duction of the much needed reforms in Armenia. The burgomaster of Versa, who arrested Overdank, is constantly receiving threaten- ing letters. • The president of the German Reichstag has received 42,000 marks from the New loak brewers. The Austrian Emperor granted a private audience to De Giers, Russian F( Minister. icign The A WUd Cat Ridlas a Deer One night recently a hunter residing near Custer was aroused by an unusuul noislne^ his cabin. Taking his gun he went out ^i^ Ifr^' ^^ '^-^S'*^ T^' -°d noticed adeS at f uU speed with a wild cat perched on i to back and making frantic efforts to cut the t:ii^'tii di^'r^^'f,^*^*^-*^^* when, thfl C* "' "" paces from revved th?f *^'k^" "^^ ^*- Ex^n^ation ^J^ J *L ***« man's first shot had ;r°"^±f; ;te wild cat m the beCwMe Sat tT°^ l»t it sgua«dy in th^hJd. wd that the deer bad died from th^ *ffe;,ta of tne DUnig received from its straaga rider. A hurricane at Limerick caused serious damage. Houses were blown down, and shipping suffered. The British troops were recen'.ly engag- ed m manoeuvres at Alexandria, in imitt tion of a seige of Cairo. Important evidence has been obtained re- gardmg the perpetration of outrages for the last two years in the west of Ireland. /^ .The police are guarding the house o^ the informer Farrel, in Dublin, in consequence of threats of violence acrainafc hu mnt,or onri sister. violence against his mother and Over three thousand congratulatory let- ters and telegrams were received by the Crown Prince and Princess, on the occasion of their silver weddin p. The Porte has sent a note to the Powers pointing out that the English note concern- ing Egypt is at variance with Turkey's ad- mitted rights over Egypi. The Brazilian loan .of four million pounds at four and a half per cent, put on the London market by Hothsohild at 89 has been more than subscribed. The Irish police anticipate cspturinz all the members of the organization which promoted crimes^ and also the concerned in the murder of Lord morris. persons Mount- suWect. The tosquer T)U8iW»a is one in which the Japfiwe liM» ilirays exbeOed but respectinst, -which *.rB»e jieatest seogreey has been observed. I» appeaw that the ra- rio^s kinds of iacqueriure ppccufed by tap- ping the lacquer tree [Lhm vemicifera), which is abundant all over the main island, andisako met with iuKiushiu aadtShikokuf Special tools are used for the purp se, and it 13 said to need a certain " koack ' to se- cure the exuding juice in a pure and proper condition. £n its crude state the lacquer is priced at 90 to a lOfOyen, or, at the pre- sent low rate of exchange, equal to between 12^. and 13;. per tub of about 4 gallons. The manufacturea articles undergoes many trans- formations, mixtures being prepared and sold in which seaweed-jelly, grated sweet potatoes, soot, charcoal, iron filings boiled in rice vinegar, ground sea-shells, turpentine, whetstone water,eamphor,oils, oxide of iron, gold, silver, or tin powder and sundry other ingredients are incorporated. Mr. yuih mentions a very remarkable property of lac- quer. He says â€" " If crude lacquer, which is originally of the color and consiste cy of cream, is ex- posed to the fun for a few days witherut adding water, it loses its creamy color and becomes quite black, or nearly so, but also becomes thinner and transparent, or rather translucent- as can be seen when it is smear- ed ou a white board. It will not now, how- ever, dry if applied to an article, even it kept a month or more in the damp press. But if water is mixed with the lacquer which has thus been exposed and become b'ack it at once loses the black cob r. and its tran- sparency, and becomes ngain of a creamy color, though slightly darker, as if some coffee had been added, than at first. After evaporating the water, it can then be used like any ordinary lacquer, cither a' one cr in mixtures, and will dry in the lamp press, during which pyocess it agains turns black. Lacquer will not dry or harden properly in the open air. It must have a damp,closc atmosphere to do so, otherwise it would run and remain sticky. The Japanese use a cave or an underground cellar, where prac- ticable, or, in default, an air-tight case of wood, with rough, unplaned planks inside. Theseare thoroughly wetted before the lac- quered article is put in to dryj the procesa occupying a period of from six to 50 hours, according to the time of the year and the sort of lacquer used. Th3 business is one evidently requiring patienea, care, and cheap labor, seeing that Mr. Quin enumer- ates 3.3 different processes in applying the lacquer, with periods of drying or rest be- tween many of them cf from 12 to 40 hours. The tools, brushes, smoothers, c., arc dif- ferent for the various sorts of lacquers, as well as for the articles to which they are applied, gold licquering, flat or raised, appearing to be the highest form of the art. So far as the particulars given by Mr. Quin enable us to judge, it seems likely that the Japanese w;ll be allowed to retain a mono- poly of this, to them, important industry. â€" • â- â€" â- â€" â- I » /.n Incident in Virginia. Our old friend, :Mr. Wm, Claughtuin, of Heatbsville, sheriff" of Northumberland Co., Va., says, "We have many good medicines in our p Its, but nothing which equals St. Jacobs Oil, the Great German Remedy. My family teep the Oil in the bouse at all times and use it for almost everything that a medi- cine can be used for. They clam that it is unequaled for rheumatism and all bodily Vi^s.â€"Tapjiahaniiod; (Va.,) Tide Water Indc.1-. The toothless man ought to be a sweet talker, for all his wor.ls must of necsssity be gum drops. ^â- ^ss'??'k"°," 'Jv.'i!"""' received (December. hnn;i ^n^l- ^\°/- Mu"aJ^. from her hus- vP«r=" H '^^â- J**'??- Murray, who was for many J.r^ i^r**^^ •^?°4'ictor for the Great West- ^^^.5?^"^^^ *•â- Niagara Falls, afterwards one of the contractors on the enlarged Wel- land Canal (section 12), and is now m North- ern Michigan, looking after his timber inter- fstsintbatcouatry. He writes: rell Sutherland! am now startinir fortho rn°H°?LTV' °'"' ^^^^^ I ^^" be afl winter^ and that I am now without ache or pain in either my knees or arms (something I have of RlZm^J?; 5-ea'^)j,tl»'^nks to the two botui! of Rheumatine which I procured from him he- fore leaving Bt. Catharines. The Vicar of Holy Trinity at Stratford- ' upon-Avon, the church iu which lie buried the remains of William Shakespeare, has been fined £1 123. and sent to jail for a day tor assaulting one of the choir boys. BRIGGS* GEXri.XE ELECTRIC OIL. Electricity feeds the brain and muscles â- in n word, it is Nature's food, tw*^°f^-®°*^^*'?,^* possesses all the qualities that It IS possible to combine in a meScine thereby giving it a wide rantce of aDPlicatkn as an internal remedy for man and b^t Th^ happiest results follow its use and K»r^?ouR Diseases, such as Rheumatism Nen^okrtro^i indred diseases, it has no equal. ^^ "' For Throat "^d J;»ns Mseascs, Bow cl Com- It IS truly a marvel. Tee Oil hPsM^o «^.«-*.- appetite, promoting digestion^l^f checkIS? fermentation on the stomach, antidotes iocii DavyCUk. D, Of J one 3rd, write," „ though comparotivelv a ». bwteken the lead in^tliir' ppnfier, our sales of iirL„ of another medicines i^t danng the last year." ig ' According to the Z^ancrtu. tal auantitv nf m..j;- '*»tt-tt total quantity of medic hb. UnitedStatwaresold " nostrums. "tWf« foo^j ,Tr,_ Ifflporiaat. when you visit orleavov Baggage Expressage m|^?^ stop at Grand UniSv hSt^'" Central Dep ot. loOeWwu^'l a cost of one million don^ Sf upwards per day. ^Sk^] Restaurant suppliedT^, "l cars, stages and elcvatert °* pots. Families can live W. at the Grand Union HoteUh'"" first-class hotel in the city The Birmingham ^Mtik.i commends for chilblains .7 ,i diluted nitric acid and p^Ll!"' be applied daily at first, Ti,,: day. An Admonition. To neglejt a cough or cli vite consumption, that des^r^' human race. Hagyard's PectoS^ cure the cough and allay al' ini. bronchial tubes and iungj ' remedy all pulmonary wipUi. Asthma, Bronchitis, Whoopi^ An unexpected and dc ightfulki riage to a Michigan girl broDei attack of heart disease. The Very Latest Ken I "Have you heard thft latest' c=irrl city swell to another. "\o do w is." "Well. I have at last m uh by one trial of Putuams I'iinilT rtactor, and I know yours were p than mine were. I coulan't pass witS you to get a bottle at your drS guarantee it will flx'om completelTn prompt and painless, taking the'ia, once. Sold everywhere. Bewared and imitations. ' A young man wl:o wanted toti in Kansas could not tell hori; perpendicular, but the eommittei ed that as the numbers had themselves. A Secret. The secret of beauty lies mpofl good health, without the om i impossible. Burdock Blood Bi; grand key that unlocks all the opens the avenue to health br and regulatLns; all the organs action. It curesall Scrofulous Di the Blood, Liver, Kidneys, Skua and brings the bloom of health t;i cheek. 14 "i GERM' THE GREAT ANREI CURES Rheumatism, Neuralgia.! Lumbago, Backache, Headache.!* SorcThpoat,SwelIln«:».S Barns, Scalds. FrMll IXD ALL OTHER DODllV PUSS ""1 SoM by Druggists and Dealers everrwhm- BT' Directions in 11 LsnEi"" J THE CHARLES A. VMElBJ (SuccessontoA. VlXiElj:B4C0) BtlU""' I TAGS. Pacent eyciet, smoifil heavy and very touc^J newpricelist. J.G.iHii^ Prin ters, Toronto. RS. WOOLr CO.. OAKVIlJ-4 â- FACrUREIlS of Outside Blinds, Sash, Doors, and Mouloii;= ' prices, Oakville, Ont. F' [angFFI lOR SALE OR EXCHJ- property in the village of W" |i.i cedent business stand, with louj, venient, improved farm of three M* with frame buildings. Address f° Sydney. TO Dl and checking antidotes or duces rheuma'ti^"brdestTO^n^V'hi"^^ 'â- °- and phosphate of liie in ffifnes an'd'nJ? membranes inclosing the joints ^^^ Price 25 cents per bottle ^m k.- n j gists. (EclectricnotElectrif)' byalldrug- wal\vo1deT^f ?hf^ Richmond, a contest ^^L^ ^l" '^®°«°* municipal elec- rZfi^ *T" "i *^^ ^didates tossing up a d°eSg an'l'ctL^fe: f.J^v4^ ^^ which ff ten accompany rhiTe*o°r'"^^^ lot, bal- puStf^^rbfoor^^^-g^'^ening: A ttlsgnlded Sbowauu. xi-^l*'?}^K Showman once Advertised for the FoUowing Curiosities A Printer who earned Tobacco, a Negro Minstrel who Did not w^r a Ping Hat, a Woman who did not H^Tir/r^"^t*,?^' Editor who gad Ten dollars in his Pocket, a Dog whose blood; regulates the secretinnJ """ ^^^**" ^*=*s direct secretions, and arouses the whole ^^^^i^izr^^i!?^^:^ to action. A system rpHOSPJ VV'JSHIXU A. purchase a business ef anV" the city or elsewhere should ci'.? culars to C. J. PALIX, 53 anil « East. Business Agent and/ aluer PAD nC~ VaientUie and Easter UAKUo. So. or ?io lots. Br s, H. J. MATT HE\VS t unOi-Jl ,XTARIO VErEIUNAHV ROXTO. Students ca:i f ber until January. PROF., Edin. Principal. Fees, li ftlj CAWADIAK HLTIAL Al»' Co-operative Life Assuranc^ families incaseof death. ^\."Eâ- Sec, 87 King St. West, Toronto. T^ARM' FOR SALE -1 "' POJJJ o _..-.„... ._R SALE^^EIN'S^ JT Gwillimbury, adjoining to« 5, Landing 212 acres. Northern K- 1^^ uated on corner of this Lot. tne rolling clay loam Brick hojise Barn. • J. W. G WHITXE^. ' 25 Toronto-st Toronto. LADIES BEWAfiE offtt^ sets.. corsets will not break, or 'ose'^eif corsets made by Croiupt*" Toronto. work^Tf "^^ P'"'"^^' died from over- improved Si MriSl l"?!"" "" "» â- ^rit. Try it? " '""?•?""'« »' General Financii Sums of from $200 to S50.*"J"m4»^ tent Rights, Husiness Chancjs. • (, Hotels, Saloons, ard any kin"" or exchangeable property. J. I. «v*s*, Leader I WORM F |t was not until i ached the subjec her mother. Mr. sanctum for 1 ioke, and mother her in the mag: neleci walls, antiq ily wrought wine by stranger Eeein] ^ve taken tham ther and daught Idling dinner-dresi )let velvet, the •nt her neck, lea' rround.full throa Ittple and gold p£ "Ur, was no less lo^ oking than Louie. [Drawing a Tui rother's teet, Loui( Dd with her small «r face a little flm ied to speak of •ted trip abroad, i ktmpany them. Tl picture sitting ther ^her velvetand sil _onherfacethatt( lAppinesj ear h ca nth her nothing 1 ne fair young girl, â- »llmg in soft foldi pression in her L "y. that show [P'^«»ree yet in an J Smkingback up Ifterlo* chair, Mui I her of the bright 1 pood had that da •nd earnest as she I *aant to visit and flee. â- "Oh, mamma, |l«»ded. " don't kno wottghtfally. •• sfer^*^»^gyoi ;^«»t6d1o travel â- â- f»«too bad w 2** I OAve no p« S« ooantry wt ^itiBBoch a H i lit, tod Mr« Aro plcascnt to tatc. Pnttiativc. I« a Er.ir. j, ftwrjujui ci worm" ia ^â- ^" ^iSSw-s,^ i;.,:=issi3«.i£-^i"i!^ Li-i.v- f