T j^i ;. 1 Heroic Princess â€" SanaJtan Two Klads offlduUesâ€" Ckatter. Two Kinds of Indies. A writer on the New Haven Evening Rerjvitcr relates an incident which bears a lesson wit'i it. As a young ladjr walked hnrriedly down Scte street upon a bleak winter day, Iier attention wasatcracted to a deformed boy loming toward her carrying several bundles. He was thinly clad, twist- ed his limbs most strangely as he walked, and looked before him with a vacant stare. Just before the cripple reached the brisk pedestrian he tumbled, thus dropping one Dundle, which broke and emptied a string of sausages on the sidewalk. The richly- dressed ladies (?) near by held br.ck their silken skirts and whispered quite audibFy, "How horrid " while several passed by who, amused by the boy's look ot dismay, gave vent to tlieir feelings in a half-suppressed laugi;, and then wint on without taking further interest. All this increased the boy's embarrassment. He stooped to pick up the sausages only to let fall another parcel, when in despair, hf stood and looked at bis lost spoils. In an instant the bright-faced stranger itepped to the boy's side, and said in a tone of thorough kindness, "Let me hold these other bundles while you pick up what you have lost." In dumb astonishment the cripple harded all he had to the young Samaritan, and devoted himself to securing his cherished sausage?. \Vlien these were again stroiik,ly tied in the coarse, torn paper, t'.cr skilful hands replaced the parcels on his s'prawny arms, as she bestowed on him a smile of encouragement, and said "I hope you haven't far to go."' The poor fellow siemed scarcely to hear the girl's pleasant v.ord3, but lo king at her with the same vacant stare " Be you a lady?" " 1 hope so 1 try to be," was the surprised response. •'I was kind of hopin? you wasn't." "Why," asked the listenir, with curiosity quite aroused. "Cause I've seen such as called themselves ladies, but they never spoke kind and pleasant like 'ceptiiig to grand uns I guess there's two kinds â€" thc:)i a; think they are ladies and iiu't an 1 thorn as vhat tries to be and is." h« looked at wu noTel. No woman would dare go into the street painted so much ot with such a pronounced red as superabund- ant health and spirits hai dyed every pair of girlish cheeks. It is not Ukely that any drag could produce the flash and sparkle one sees in every pair of girlish eyes, for the young women here get the charms they boast of by skating side by side with their brothers, racing on snowshoes with the men, tobogganing, wherever tobogganing can be practised, walking like Indians, and running like deer. A group of them is of as many bright colors as a bunch of garden flowers, and one gets the impression t hat they dress loudly, but this comes of a habit they have of tying a bright-colored worsted comforter over their heads and around their necks whenever they go out of doors in cold weath- er. The other day, at the snowshoe race, the totKJgganing hills, and in the sleighs, the woman from the United States shivered urder their seal-skin sacques, while the Montreal girls stood knee-deep in snow, sat on snow-banks, or stood on the hilltops half an hour at a stretch. "I must tell you how these girls dress," said a New York woman to her husband. " First, they start with flannel from head to foot â€" and such flannel Why, it's an eighth of an ich thick. Then they go on like other women, except that they put on more skirts, and usually a quilted one thst's as warm as a wood fire. Then they put on a dress, and over that a chamois jacket that fits like a shoe in the mud. Then they put ribbed-woollen stock- ings over their stockings, and arctics over their shoes. They don't care any more about the locks of their foet than the St Louis wo- men do. They they put on knit wristers, then gloves, then a fur or cloth dolman, then a fur cap, and finally a coil of worsted com- forters. When they are dressed, if they are hurled at a speed of a mile a minute from a toboggan they are unhurt. If they fall through the ice, they are u it hurt. If the theniiometer drops to 15 below, they lead of it next day and wish they had kno^n it at the time. A Heroic Princess, The several current press notices of the r.-'val order of Kapiolani, recently presented TO the author of " Kalani of Oahu" by King iCilakana, failing to describe the religio- omautic incident which imparts intrinsic vaiueMu the name, a correspondent to the rij=t,..ii CiinriiT ieailna brief epitome of the ttory for pablicati-m. The literal meaning ii Kipiol^ui la â- "o. .-onur of heaven." Piin- i 'sa K..pio iii i ot llawidi was daughter of Die Kuig 1 f ildo End a^nong the first con- verts of the ursjiuiiiu-ufs. Wnen first seen i.y the white cle.-j,3" Kaj.ic/aiii was in a nude state, ])u!jiicly aiiuiiitujy iicrself with cocoa- nut oil, while unuer^oiiig some heathen rite of her tabu creed. From this state of pagan degradation the beautiful princess soon be- came one of the most devout Christian con- verts, glowing with pious zeal to a:coiiiplio,h something which might break thro'jgh the superstitions of her people. Twenty-six thousand idols had been destroyed by lire by order of King Liholiho and the higii priest, Hewahewa, and yet the degra ling tabu re- mained unbroken. It was time some other overt act to be thought of. In a state of drunken frenzy Liholiho had broken the tabu by eating with the women. A brave act for a young king, but not of suthcient import- ajice to affect the tabu. Kapiolani now canio to the rescue, and. with a moral heroism equal to any act of her SI X, she determmed to brave Pele in her own liery stronijhold f Kilauea, testing the divine power of her new-found Cod by defy- ing the goddess and breaking her tabu in presence of a multitude. News of her in- tended sacrilege was proclaimed all over the island, creatirg a feeling of consternation, not only for the welfare of the Princess, but lest the very island should be destroyed. Many came to plead that she would abandon the rash act and none Mere more terrified for her safety than Xailio, her warrior-hus- band. Followed by eighty of her terror-itricken fricn i, Kapiolani walked a hundred miles through the mouutain wilJen.Cis on her pil- grima^ie of terror. Approaching the seeth- ing crater, Kapiolani was met by a shriveled old pritstussof Pele, bearing a fiery ma'.edic- tioa from Pele â€" hot from the ilreavl Hali- manman (house of everlasting fire) â€" in ivhiclp Pole threatened not only death to n'lT con'.ers bet destruction to tlie is- land. The multitude st.,o.i appalled, and begged t'ne priiic'^s.^ to desist fn.:n her rash act: but, (luotnii; siiiu? new-learned passages from '-^•riptuv.-' to the Kahuna Wahiue (womaa priest) Kapiolani walked calmly aud reso- lutely to tue crater's verge, where the sea of molten lava raged like astorui-liished ccian, liemonstniting the rage of I'ele. Gathering a hantiful of sacred ohelo beirie;, ever con- secrated to Pele, she ate them in derision cf the tabu rite, instead of casting them into the crater as a peace offered to the goddess. Gathering up stones, she threw them into the hery flood instead of the accustomed harries. Standing there in the presence ot the most awful natural phenomena on earth, confronting the most terrible conception of a pagan deity, Kapiolani calmly addressed the multitude as they stood appalled at their own fears ' ' Behold my people, the gods of Hawaii are vain gods. Great is Jehovah, my God. He kindles these fires. Fear not Pele she is powerless. Should I perish, then fear her power. Should God preserve me, then break your tabu, knowing there is bat one God, Jehovah." In commemoration of this brave act of Kapiolani Ke Nul (the great) the king's present wife was named, and his royal order of Kapiolani was proclaimed, for the "recompense of distinguished merit to the state, for humanity, genias, science and art, services rendered touurselves or our succesbora." Canadian Belles. To one who has heard the beauties of Baltimore, Brooklyn and Murray Hill gjuAa rated beyond comparison, the Montreal girls and those from the other «TiLn«HiAn cities, says a correspondent writing of the recent winter carnival at Montreal, proves as interesting as anything where each object CHATTER. A wife may be a blessing, but a dumb wife is an unspeakable blessing. Any girl will tell you that gold bangles are warmer than worsted wristlets. A New Jersey man has patented a stove that explodes at 10 o'clock at night. He has four daughters. Silas Card was married the other day, and on his wedding Lotices were the words, "No cerds." But he doesn't know what might happen. Kate Field did not succeed as the boss of a dry-goods store. Women shines best as a boss when workmen come to make repairs on her house. A man who *^as happened to have a good deal of experience says, " Stand anywhere but four feet to the left of a woman when she hurls an old bottle at a hen." A New York lover stabbed a girl because she rejected him. This should warn the girls that the safest way to reject a man is to leave town and send him a postal- card. Overheard in the cloak-room " Did she mairy well " "Yes, indeed. He's worth over a million, and drinks so hard that he never can go into society so she's not bothered with him." A man always looks through his pockets four times before handing his coat to his wife to have a button sewed on, and even tiien he is filled with a nameless fear until the job is completed. One c luse of poverty and distress amocg fellows who many before they can raise a moustache 's that they generally become fathers of twins before they are proprietors of two pairs of pants. A female physician in a New York town is charged with commencing a post-mortem examination before the patient was dead. She is entitled to the medal as the most in- quisitive woman en record. Earnest Spinster â€" " Since yon sympath- ize 80 much with Iho Blue Kibbon irmy, why don't you join us, Miss Masham " Frivolous Ditto â€" "So I would only the rib- bon is really such a very dreadful blue " A New York doctor says that small feet signify a quick temper and an evil tongue. Now everybody will be staring at his wife ta see whether her feat or large or small.and no matter which way the verdict is she won't be pleased. The young lady who made seven hundred words out of " conservatory,"' last fall, has eloped. We feel sorry for the young man it is bad enough where one word brings on another, but just think of one word bringing (m seven hundred. A C-ycar-old boy at Belfast, Me., has very advanced iciea â- . He has a doll which he call his wife. Kecently he was telling his wife his future plans, and remarked "By and bye I shall become a mason, and then you won't see me till 12 o'clock at night." "William, my son," says an economical mother to her son, " for mercy's sake don't keep tramping up and down the floor in that manner, you'll wear out your new boots. He sits down. There you go â€" sitting down Now you'll wear out you new trousers I de- clare I never seen such a boy " Lady " But, professor, how came you to offend Mrs. Smith?" Protessor: "Ah, I vill tell you. Mme. Smit she come to me, I do vant my daughter to sing so high as Mees Brown and she fly in one rage, and say as dhere is nosing low in her fa-milly, yen I say Mees Smit she haf a low voice " Clara Bell says that a cigarette young wo- man, when asked how she would like a geu- tleman, upon kissing her, to taste tobacco on her lips, replied sharply to the sister who questioned her "How many men did you ever kiss on whose lips or mustache you did not taste tobacco?" And the conversa- tion flagged. An exchange says a robber entered the sleeping-room tf a young lady at Milford, Pa., the other night, and stole a fino growth of hair from her head, but it does not explain why the young lady did not hang her hair on the back of a chair before retiring. She must have come in late from a party and been in a hurry to so to bed. Plain Womanâ€" How shall you be able to increase the attractiveness of your face and pcraon without the use of cosmetics or other artificia' means Easy enough get invited on to Wadungton, aad appear at one of the receptions there. The papers of the entire country will next day gloat over your ravish- ing beaaty. A keen student of human nature must have written the foUowinjt "When you aee a young man sailing down street shortly aft- er midnight with his collar mashed down hw neck, you can make up your mind there s a girl crawling upstairs not far distant with her shoes under her arm and an extinguish- ed lamp in her hands." A joung lady was curling her back locks recently when suddenly she threw up her hands, gave vent to a double decker, forty- two ohm yell, which electrified the house- hold, and began to danoe a remarkable new style of double shuffle on the floor, begging in vociferous tones that someone would open the back of her dress. After the peiform- ance was over, and calmness restored, it was discovered that she had dropped the hot slate pencil, with wuich she had been curling her hair, down her back. Slate pencils were made to write with, not to e* or heat. » â- â- â€" « I m â€" A Train In a Sandstorm. The Southerland overland train which should have reached this city on Monday afternoon only arrived at 8.10 last night, having been delayed at Sumner by a ter- rific sandstorm that raged through the Mo- javo Desert and spread out over a portion of the surrounding country. The storm be- gan in the early morning, and when the train reached Sumner, in Kern County, had become a regular simoom. The wind swept across the sandy wastes with such violence that the train swayed and rocked under the violence of the blasts, and seemed ready to plunge from the track. The moon had be- come overcast in the early part of the night, and the journey was continued in a darkness that rapidly increased until the day began in Stygian gloom. The pass- engers, who had been aroused from their sleep by the fierce assaults of the wind and the dashing of the sand against the windows of the train, looked anxiously for the ap- pearance of the sun, but no gleam of light relieved the forbidding darkness of the east. Night maintained her sway, and the blacfcfiess of the heavens grew intense with the morning, until the strong headlight of the locomotive almost failed to pierce it. The small portion of the desert which was exposed by the engine's lights only served to discourage the travellers. The track was lost under the billows of sand that were being tossed across the rails by the angry storm. The desert moved like a sea, and when the waves of sand struck the shivering Rides of the train they sciitered like spray and filled the air with a dust which made free breathing impossible. The travellers' fears of being stopped by a sand drift were soan realized. After leaving Sunrner, which was 314 miles from San Francisco, the train moved cautiously for 10 miles through the shifting waste and then stopped with a crash. The alarmed passengers hardly dared to face the driving storm to learn the cause of the unpleasant halt. The few intrepid persons wtio ven- tured into the blinding simoom found that their express train had run into a freight train which had stopped in an impas able sand drift. The slow rate at which the ex- press was moving enabled the engineer to stop the train in time to prevent a serious accident, and the collitiion was only suffi- cient to cast the locomotive from the track. •The passenger cars remained on the rails. It was then ten o'clock, so slowly had the express train proceeded through the blinding storm after leaving Sumner. The darkness of the night had only increased, and nothicg was visible except within the focus cf the train's lights. For five weary hours the passengers were compelled to remain on the detatched train while relief was being ob- tained from Sumner. Assistance having ar- rived, the track was cleared of sand suffici- ently to enable a relief engine to pull the express train back to Sumntr, wLere the passengers found slim accomodation until the storm blew over. Toward five o'clock in the afternoon the dirkness began to dis- appear, but the simoom maintained its vig- or until nightfall. Yesterday morning the unfortunate passengers proceeded on their journey the remainder of which was made without sensational incident, as gangs of Chinese had been at work all night and had cleared the track of the accumulated sand drift. â€" San Francisco Examiner. Opinm in Clilna. Tobacco came to China early in the seven- teenth century, and tobacco-smoking origi- nated opium-smoking in the islands of Java and Formosa. From this last island opium- smoking spread as a popular habit into China about the year 1720. The first pro- hibitory edict issued at Peking was in 1729 From that time the habit went on quietly as a social disease, insidiously extending it- self without much attention being paid to it till the end of the eighteenth century, when viceroys began to show alarm. From that time thii great scourge of China forced i self into history, and became every year an evil more uncontrollable till the present time The use of the poppy capsules and of opium continued to be a part of practical medicine m China from the fifteenth century till the edict was issued, after which the nseof opium was omitted in medical book- but that of the capsule was continued The poppy therefore was still grown to supply druggists with capsules but opium wm only made surreptitiously when the import- ed article could not be had A similar light might be thrown on the history of ^abian medicine, in regard to products of distUlation, and the prhiciple^ ot medicine, from the Chinese side. Th^ Chinese physicians learned from the Arabs and the Arabsin their turn from the CbW China taught them alchemy and peS; some points m medical theoiy. Thev^3f ' Chi^ distUUtioD, and sent hef^S Travellers in Szechwen and in Rain„f.n«, agree in stating that the men in S Young and middle-aged men, Buffenng from nwvons debiUty and kmdred affec- tions, as loss of memory and hypochondria, should inclose three stamM for Part \II of world's Dispensary Dime Series of pamph- lets. Address World's Dispknsaby Mbdi- CAL AssociAtioN, Boffalo, N. Y. In Signor Berti's plan for re-foresting Italy about $9,000, 000 is apportioned among the provinces. "Golden Medical Discovery" is not only a sovereign remedy for consumption, but also for consumptive night-sweats, bronchi- tif, coughs, influenza, spitting of blood, weak luDgs, shortness of breath, and kindred aflfections of the throat and chest. By Druggists. Liberalism is creeping into all churches but the poor preachers notice that it has not yet struck the contribution-box. BeantlfOl Women are made pallid and unattractive by func- tional irregularities, which Dr. Pierce's "Favorite Prescription" will infallibly cure. Thousands of testimonials. By druggists. It is reported that the remaining vacan- cies in the Senate will be filled within a few das. Have You Tried It? -If so, you can testify to its marvellous powers of healing, and re- commend It to your friends. We refer to Brifcgs' Magic Relief, the grand specific for all summer complaints, diarrhcea, cholera morbus, dysentry, cramps, colic, sickness of the stom- ach, and bowel complaints. A special tax is to be placed on drugs in Japan, in lieu of the ordinary trade tax. Large revenue is expected. Many sink into an early grave by not giving immediate attention to a slight cough which could be stopped in time by the use of a twenty- five cent bottle of Dr. Wistar's Pulmonic Syrup. Russia had last ysar 776 periodical pub- lications, including newspapers. The larg- est circulation was 70,000. A Run for Life.â€" Sixteen miles were cover- ed in two hours and ten minutes by a lad sent for a bottle of Briggs' Blectric Oil. Good time, but poor policy to be so far from a drug store without it. If you would be perfectly sure that your evil deeds will not be found out the best way is not to do any. Carboline, a natural hair restorer and dressing, as now improved and perfected, is pronounced by competent authority to be the best artic e ever invented to restore th' vitality of youth t- diseased and faded hair. 'L'ry it. Sold by all druggists. An exchanee wants to know: "What are our young men coming to " Coining to see our girh of course. Teacher Questions Small boy Which is is the most delicate of senses? Small boyâ€" The sense of touch. Teacherâ€" give class au "ex- ample. Boy settles down on teacher's corns and exclaimsâ€" You can feel them, but we can- not see them. Grand transformation scene, This occurred betore the introduction of Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor, that positive remedy for corns. Putnam's Corn Extractor acts only upon the part affected, makes no cavities in the flesh, leaves no ulcers, and is satisfactory in every respect. N. C. Poison Cc, prop's, Kingston. A Secret The secret of beauty lies in pure blood aod good health, without the one the other is impossible. Burdock Blood Bitters is the grand key that unlocks all the secretions, opens the avenue to health by purifying and regulating all the organs to a proper action. It curesall Scrofulous Diseases, acts on the Blood, Liver. Kidneys, Skm and Bowels, and brings the bloom of health to the pallid cheek. i4 Bill Nye is not a Mormon. He gives out as his platform "One country, one flag and one wife." Billy says he " has never pined to make the marriage register of his family Bible look like a hotel register." Yegetine is nourishing and trengtheniugss purifies the blood; regulates the bowels; quiets the nervous system, acts directly upon the secretions, and arouses the whole sy tern to action. Competition is lively among the mer- chants of Manchester, N. H. One adver- tise that he is mating three-cent postages stamps down to two cents, iu view of the probable reduction in postage rates by the Government, though he thoughtfully stipu- lates that only a single stamp shall be sold to one person. An Admonition. To ueglejt a cough or c^ld, is but to in- vite consumption, that destroyer of the human race. Hagyard's Pectoral Balsam will cure the cough and allay all irritation of the bronchial tubes and iungs, and effectually remedy all pulmonary complaints, such m Asthma, Bronchitis, Whooping Cough, c. 1 o • can IS 1 American vl 1 Davy Clak, of June 3rd, write," Ha'rn though comparatively ^^^ has token the lead in thlr* punfier, our sales of it L' of aU other medicine, nsed"W during the laat year." ig '*% Herbert Spencer sava tk 1 »n vl 1 certainly h ' V powerful if he is to earn «,?" H coming American taxes. "'"'•1 Important When you visit orleavrv' Baggage Expressage and clw^iJ stop at Grand Lnio\ Hotp?"'*! Central Dep ot. 450 elegnjit i:i a cost of one million rtoliani '"".t upwards per day. EuronMn""'^! Restaurant supplied with ti,"" 1 cars, stages and elevated r.n pots. Families can live betf„"/««i J at the Grand Union Hotptk'"' k first-class hotel in the citT; " A San FracciscD grocer hal I prosecuted for t e^t, thontrh g" '1 old, and what she stole was i snuff, worth three cents. Immense dcinaiiji We are not at all surpriscrt „ i i demand of the people' e?i' famous medicine. Vcgetine i« 1 coming more and more cxte'ndJ"'?! been in demand all over our owj J" had some time ago made iu war- foreign lands. At the present timSI ed proprietor. Mr. H. ]l. iitevenrn' J sending it to order to sume of tho«l^ cign countries and it seems now S vegetine is to bofoino a univcralrnS is a "patent mcciicinf," butit^ai, fame and made its wavcvervwh* intrinsic merit--.. Sucli wcretheun^, and undeniable results of the useo â- ishing, and, at this day, worid-renom cine, in speedily etfcctirB cures of numerous diseases or ills for which " clared to be a remedy. thatpeopleevJ were open and decided in expressafiJ ion that this "patent medicine" mtsJ be ranked equal with.b;it altcctherj all the regular "doctors' sluif" (ti£;a been given in sickess. There was and thoro conld bcii about the aslonishin;; medicine. ,. f urc3 effect? I 1 he doctors could not tel especially as many of sncii cures j effected in the most respectable, waj well-known families, where the s valids bad obtained and taken thVl as a last resort, after the regular i_ had utterly failed to do them any gmtl Moreover, testimonial letters froii;f well-knowu pcsons in high staodcj undoubted character and veracity i, pour in upon Mr. H. R. Stevens, ti!|l tor, in abundance, declaring, andcJ the deepest gratitune. the surprs^ wrought by the great medicine. Such testimonials have cantinuei upon Mr. Stevens, from first to lasii has enough to make volumca wereb] them all. Hut be don't publishers! newspapers, only a small fraction o!3 it any wonder, tlicn, that the sale o!^ is now increasingly at a surprisin; Providence (R, I.) Gazette. Vegetine is Sold by .411 Drnj MISCEL LANEOUsij Toronl-ii. A?!k1 RrBBKSsTvnr 1 King St. K ^t, WATCH E' re;raircd. Trade worsii ty. A. B.vt,l.\b::v. S lyin g Sl LI] C" ""HRISlSIIKPi^Vi:r)7:,ri'MfrofJta other rfo.7iet' Jev\-cii. lil lvin?l;,l PRIC K~TrCIvETS, 'SIIO\V CiRDlf DOW SHADES. Newest deifij for price list. F. William s. 4 KingL lf lA/ 1 DC ""^i^'^ow GuTiu)57ivIi If I n C and Wire Goods at the Tonol Works, 116_King St. West. T. G. RKj ill ATP U CO Send for fre» i"u-t: W n I utlCdf loi,'ueloKYr.IE,iH IS Yon^e Street. Toronto. ei (\(\ â„¢"" a' WOKKIN'G »i5jL«"U steam En.irine.witblaajc C. HOTl'ER. 31 King-st., East, Torois FARMS IN MARYLAND-lMPE'l $10 to 825 per acre catalofBesfreil CHAMBERS. Fedoralsburgh, Maryjd TUE' KEJIIVe\.4TOB. TIlKliREil BAL Remedv, 2.)n. per package]) By mail. Box 17, IJro ntc. Ont. Ageit!' FOR SALK-SAW MILL MACl including oscillacinir stock anas gangs of steel and iron, with Piin»| pulleys, flv wheels and shaft comp«p RATHBUN SOX. Deseronto,On£ TAGS. WOOJl OXTARTO VETi RON TO. ±"±.^Tt€^?^^:^^^^^n::ToSn are vigorous and tall, and do not s^eT l«xk worse on account of indulrineTn t£ Tice The factiB that three or S in ten smokeraaremen who smoke withonfLr the glow Of health from ^^JiSiiS The fact is that three or four in ten ho smoke cj -, from their Some say than two in ten are such Th^ perform every duty Thev wt \r^ maybe noticed that th^ok? '" ' may for aU that have^b^ *^«nty years. Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sc at ca. Lumbago, Backache, Heada^e, Toothache. ' â- Sams, Sc«Idii, Frost BltM. • IKD ALL OTUKB BODILY P*«8 AIDACUBS. SETTLERS Yrt they smoking for PimFEsanwrr- M'^^^^pe^tTKJiHAs Returned J-mg-st.E«8t pS?teaitein°Wettel'°**°'«' Patent evelet. smoota heavy and vcrr tourt. new price list. J. G ^0 0.. Prin t ers. Toro nto. RS. WOOD CO.. OAKVlUE- FACTURERS of Outside u Blinds, Sash. Doors, and ^Iouâ- llne^ â- prices, Oakville, Ont. T"" HOSE WISHING^'tO DlSPOJj « purchase a business of anv oe^ the city or elsewhere should caii,â„¢, oulars to C. J. PALTK. S." "id m Ea st. Busin ess AgcnNmd Valuer., CALLTN~G CARD"s--.?MiEAl"Tin- Chromo cards ivith nai'^.tj wanted, complete outlit. â- '•7 san;pi-' '3 profits. Queen City Card House, i' Toronto. n A one Viilcnt ineand Ka^^'^f !^ UAnUO. S-.. or -SIO Ivt- Hj IT' H. J. MATTHEWS BRO?.. pi!;! her until Jani:irv. PllOK. '5Ill-l Edi n. Prin cipal Fee s. liflL112ii2 CiX.4DI4\ MI'Tt.*!- AID **% Co-operative Life As-'irflncc. famUios in case of death. A\ '^^^^„J:f Sec. 87 King St. West. Torcnto. :^-l'-\ VALUABLE PROPKRTY .F^^l The powerful ttia: Jessie, in^J the schooner Josephine: " m^ Upper also a, number of impro^^p „ I ply to L. McCALLUJI. Stromncss r. 1 $5,000,000 aSVII?! ario for sale bv the CANADA »f,"^l AGEN'CY COMPAVY, 11 Adela""' Toronto. Send for list LADIES BEWARTs^Sr corsets will not break, or lose tnej, corsets made by Croniptonl"' T oront o. â€"? F" ARM FOR SALErBf£aPft Gwillimbury, adjoining ""gi^ Landing 212 acres. Northern K- 11- ^jji uated on comer of this Lot, tne ,^^,,1 rolling clay loam Brick i";^V.,at«^ Bam. J. W.G WHITNEl, i-^ 25 Toronto-8t Toronto. ^-^^ -\TO\\K FARMERS COLOY.^ JL Free Homesteads with VJ«'""^i\ ednow open in this fertile tw^i^a Dresent settlers-improvements "" AJ full information address He«° ^^jt^ toria St.. Toronto. Intendme^ejp, ,(^ as agents, Director. RUSSIAN MULBERRY -r^rtiioi from Russia perfectl.vhara}^jj_j Ontario bears when two y^jKiueJ densely as to exclude the leases 'S.JW and delivered at railroad stanouj^j eo cents; 3 to 4 feet; 75c. snP?"l booked in rotation as received »^ ij 6both old and new varieUes.8tTa.oJ, Send for price list. J. "" bellford Nurseries and into, intenuwi* -,p JAS. ABM6TB0'" anviots, one si Uenvvell Feniai ^easury. It is levidence was c pver the vote fn bill, :m. t: fell request M. the Orleans j (le army. It. Hilaire der useless, unji bing sought to (fair. \e Folketheng, ncnt of a comn of Danish e bose in Schlesv k have been ser I at Warsaw br lecturing or Bian language ^meer of Afg He will vii rence to the L ot Kumar. cialiats at Xe and murder ereons accused have been arres w»T«S^ K^^gjH^;J.^^.^t?'k^^=.,:_i--^.v"•."'-^»it-is: