||: • pi i! â- I t i! 1 r*^' YOUNG FOLKa 30T8 WHO BECAMI FAMOUS WlksiSO THK BEKF. ' The boy'i madâ€" mad u a Manh bare Oh, to think that I shoold «v«r have 8«eh a Ho spoke a pord; Suffolk batcher as he eame stamping into liis house one evening with a very angry faoe indeed. " Good lack what aileth thee, husband " eried hk wife anxkunsly. " Hath our son Thomas done aught to displease thee He vas.ev«r a good and dutiful lad." '»' Good and dutiful, forsooth!" growled the butcher, " What think'et thou, dame, lUs*'good and dutiful lad' of thine hath tabta into his crazy pate Nothing less wffi serve his highness than to be a student ♦ sf Oxford, and win his degree there asBache- tlor of Arts." '"Xackaday that were a hard matter cried ihs good woman, opening her eyes in Munazement " V^lience hath the boy got auch high notions " "Mi/ih or low," granted her husband, ' 'tiA U one. The tmng is impossible, and there's an end on it." -J-ast then the figure of a young lad ap- fpetfed in the doorway, whose shm, well- 'tihapod 4orm, pale, delicate features, and high ^Aito narrow forehead were so utterly ^unlike ike batcher's brawny frame and ' course red face that no one could ever have guessed them to be father and son. "Sir,"sadd he, quietly but firmly, "I have 'blotted the word impossible out of my dictionary." The tone in which these bold words were vpoken and the bright, fearless look which accompanied them struck even the angry father with involuntary admiration. " I like thy spirit, son Thomas," said he, in a milder voice, '• but thou an over-bold nevertheless. Who ever heard of a butcher lad becoming a scholar and a learned clerk of Oxford I and mine have been butchers these two hundred ye^ira, and I trow that what was good enough for thy fathers is good enough for thee. ' The sly twinkle in young Tom's dark ',grey eyes showed that he saw the weakness nlustory how Thomas, the botcher • son, ruled all En«^d f«r many a jtM â- â- Cam:.jj. of his father's argument, and ' knew how to •answer it. "Thou speak'st well, father," said he; ' but tell me, I pray thee, who is the great- est man that liveth in Europe this day " â- " Why, who but his Holiness the Pope V *sai(i Thomas the elder, who, like most Eng- ^liehmen of that age, was a stanch Catholic. ' And know'stthon not, father," retorted Thomas the younger, " that his Holiness 'was a peasant's son, and worked in the 'Sdids in his youth? What if Ae had said then, "'What was good enough for my fathers is good enough for me," The great- -3i^ man in this town of ours is our worship- "' r«tl lord of the manor. His greatgrand- itktcr was but a simple yeoman, and a yeo- ' mede had remained had he thought as thou ^Rvuldst have me think, father. But foraumosh as he did good service to our lord King Henry Y. of England in the Freni^h 'wars, the King knighted him with lis own hand, and lo his descendant is ibecome a.great lord." "â- ".Son Xhocnas " cried the butcher in de- spenriteja, " wilt thou talk thine own father ijut of his senses " â- "The more .reison for letting him go •wJiere his ready «ipeech can be known and prized as it ought," put in the mother, who had been listening with delight £6 her sob'» eloquence. But the father was too thorough an Eng- ' lifthman' to give in -without resisting to the Ucaioslt. " HArk-^e, md," cried he, «' I'll make a fair bargain with 'thee. If thou, canst, within three years, mm. Ihy degree as an 'Sicferd Bachelor of Arts, well and good wut if not, give me thy word that thou'lt come home straichtway and be an honest butcher like thy father." "So 0? it," answered the lad, grasping â- ais father's hand " I give my word." '•â- And I mine," said the butcher " and :o show that I am a man of my word, the day thou wearest the gown of an Oxford Bachelor I'll give thee .the best bit of beef in my shop for thy dinner, even if King Henry himself (long life to him !) had bespok- en it." Three years had gone by since the father s.nd •son made their bargain, and the butcher, r«niembering how pale and thin his son had looked the last time he saw him, was more anxious about the result than he would have cared to own. He had justun- aooked a magnificent sirloin of beef, when his wife burst headlong into the shop, and called out in a tone of very unusual ex- citement, " What art thou doing with that beef, husband?" " It hath been hespoken by our worship- lul lord of tho manor," replied the butcher. " Were it for King Henry himself," cried the housewife, seizing the meat with both hands, "he should not have it this day 1 ~3ethink thee, husband, how thou didst ^omise that when our son should gain his degree of Bachelor of Arts â€" " " And ha,th he gained it?" broke in the ^jutcher, now quite as much excited as his wife. " Whence hast thou the news, wife? â- ' where is the messenger " " Here," answered a low, clear voice ' behind him and there stood young Thomas Otimself in the far-trimmed robe of an Ox- ?f ord Bachelor of Arts. "Brave lad!" shouted the overjoyed father, seizing his son in a hug worthy of a Polar bear, and plentifully besmearing his •new robe with tiie grease that covered hia â- own frock. "Thoa shalt have the beef, •though one diould offer me its weight in ^old. I pray thee, good friend," he added, ^turning to the lackey who had been sent for â- the meat, " let not his lordship be angry afâ€" " " My lord loveth good learning too well «obe displeased tiiereat," interrapted the â- servant, who knew the story of the butcher's ^promise to his son as weU as every other aian in the town. " May Godprosper thee. Master Thomas, and give thee joy of such a son!" A proud man was Hba batcher that night abs the neighbors flocked into congratulate "him «nd his wonderful son. And the sheriff V Mmaelf held oat his hand to the young scholar, saying, laughingly " Thou hast b^^ well, good youth, and tiioa wilt mooatrt^gh hereafter. Remember m», Ipray thee,vhen thou art a cardinaL" " There is maagr* tine word spoken in ' jest," answered the student, with a sudden fleam in his deep, earnest eyes "One. SngliBhman hatii "become a pope â€" ^why â- should not another become a cardinal " And any one may now read for himself i^Usk'n Depeaaence onibf^mf In thai* days it MMnot be too Treqowtly iterated and reiterated tliat to the sea Eng- land and the Eogliah-speaking race owe everything. Whatever may be said of Eng- land's decadence as a phyrical force among th« other great phyaioal forces of Eun^, her unique destiny as the great mwal forw rf tiie world is becoming more and more ob- vious every day. The peculiar racial char- acteristics of her people, her language, her literature, her traditfons, are colouring the great tide of human life, u the m:ghty nyer beyond the peaks of Kaf coloured, according to the Mfdiammedan fancy, the waters of th^ ocean '»s with the livii^ blood of all gems." And what is the cause of this The fever- ish atteati9D Iftt^W given W (9lS9»l matters 6 the Contln^ and the talk of Imperial Federation in England show what is tne general opinion to the cause. A great racial struggle for life'is imminent in Europe, outlets for the teeming popula- tions of the old world are urgently demand- ed, and practically there are no new coun- tries left to develope. In the new world of the West and in the new world of the South the whole of the lands in the temperate zonesDiave been appropriated, and by whom Mauily by tiie English. That this is the Cftuse of England's present dominance and of her stupen^as future hsLS now become an axiom on the Continent. But what is the cause of the cause How has it come about that in the unfilled lands of the temperate zone â€" in North America, in Africa, in Australia ^-almost every square mile oflandisinthe hands of English- men Among Englishmen we, of coarse, in- clude our brothers of the United States, with whom we of this island share with pride our blood and traditions, and between whom and us the bonds of affectionate ^ym- pathy are becoming closer and closer every year and every day. Is it true as English chauvinists assume it to be, that in the great racial struggle for life the Eagtishmtm is specially organised for success Does the English race really exhibit any superiority over the other European races Are English- men and Americans more courageous than Germans or more energetic Are they tnore high-spirited than the French, or more deft, or more frugal Are they more nobly en- dowed than the Italians with that dignified common sense which is said to be the very salt of life To answer these questions in the afiSrmative would, nodonbt, be {feasant, but would it be justified by the facts Would any English employer el labor, skilt- ed or unskilled, answer them in the afrrs- ative No there is another caase a cause wholly unrelated to race â€" for the prospects^ of the English rstce. That cause is- the sea. From no pecnUatr merit of his own, but from the favouritism of fate or circumstances or chance, is the English race destined to hold the world in its hand. The JEbglish- man's birthplace having been the only large and fruitful island of thie old world, he has become the child of the sea. That the high road of the ocean should lead him all over the worU was simply ine- vitable. Hence England'v destiny as' the august moth3r of empires sheald give rise' to DO vainglory in any Englisitman's breaet^ bnt ratbor it should give rise to a feeling; of modesty, almost of humiliatteo, before ?e- sponilMlitie* so vast. It should cause us ti ask ottrselves. Are we really andif oily worthy of this favouritism of the sea^ Thanks 1» the "silver stre^," which is wortii an entire EuFopcas army, the English race, instead of exbauflttBg its force, as the other less- lucky races bare been oUiged to do, in de- fending lronti«r8y has be«a enabled to give^ all its eoergies tostr«rigtbemhg its limbs at' home and finding fresh fields in which to strengthen them abroad. It is only of late years that the fact has been igncred that ^darforeput it to vot». England ewes her very existeni;e to- the sea ^^ â€" that without the se» she is nothings This beeemes ciear jA c»ce if we tsm to the popuDar literatiu'e aikd to the stags' of fifty years- ago. At tbe time when the aehieve- ments of Neion were stilt fresh in t^ pop- ular mind, the love of the navy was* a na- tional 'passion â€" a passion 'whose expression would be laughed at now. Out of many in- stances that occur to us we will giv one. In a volume called "^Romance of Ileal lofe" appeared a story called "S-ubordinatsan" in which was a dramatic situation of a very tempting kind for managers and playwrights. A soldier having struck his superior officer f urassvultiDghis (thssr Idier's) wife, was tried by Court-martial, and condemned to death. Admirably adapted as was such a st»ry for, the somewhat sentimental stage of tha^ time i)ouglas Jerrcdd, who understood well' the deep national passion for everything xaval, saw that by turning the military into ana- val hero the po^iular appeal of 'the story would be i»tenuned a hundredfold. Tha«he was right OB this supposition the ansals- of the stage of that time abundantly show. Nowadays a nanticid drama cannot be taken seriously at all. The very name suggests a Cockney burlesque. Thus consideaed^ ' a- â- writer ol good sea poetry would coofav a. service on the country should he reviwe in the breasts of Englishmen the old passion, for the traditions of the English navy.. Thft finest marine lyric in this or any othes- lao- guage, "Ye mariners, of England," was Mnritten by a man who had no knowlsdge whatever of the sailor's calling, and thsre is no need why the "SoboS," "Heave-hoe" and Pull aw»y, "boys," of the Dibdin school of marine poets should be revived. The lands- man, if he have the true sea-feelh^ need not shrink from entering the field. THE UME-QUr CLU" The Churmaa of the Committee on tiie SMefey the FabUc Health aaaonnoed th^ lMhi his report rejdy «««*»* WSI!^^ 1587, imd being tcW to proceed with it he aiwe in lus pUKeaad read from a Une-tint- ed mannacript •• f *«wb ' « Dar' am certain things to be looked oat far doorin' the heated senau De fast thing oa de lUt is cholera. Den oomea, in de reg- 'lar order named, yiUer fever, oonramp- Bhun. bilyuB fever, fallin' into de libber, gittin' ruli ober by » akreet ky»r an' cholera morbus. Bein- 'rested by de poUoe an sent up fur sixty days mas' be classed as a mis-^ fortin instead of a disease. ^_t.i " De hot sezan am de time to be keerfal, Wew««id recooMBWid to de oull'd poj^- shun of dis keotry "1. Joa «reiun ahoold be eftten slowly an' delibeMtely, de chin well wiped off wid a red napkin as soon as possible afterwards, an' deY^tiiU ihwld beware of mental ex- citement or^^JTelcal exershon far wi bow " 2. Sodawater an' ginger ale slidiila w pud fur in advance. Dis gives de soda-mtM a chance to look at de money an' find it all right, an' saves de customer any fear of hev- in' to take to his legs an' outrun anybody. We doan' specify as to de quantity which kin be safely surrounded. Some pussons kin hold a 'bar'l, while others stop at a gal- lon. "3. Harvest appled an' cow-oiunbers hev slsyed tens of thousands of innocent people, but dey waf' all white folks. While we doan' believe either vegetable am hannfal, it will be well to eat slowly, ohaw de rinds an' cores very fine, an' sit down in de shade of de tvoodshed fur half an hour arcer eating. "4. A watermellyon fired from a cannon at a culled gem'lan two feet away might somewhat injoore his physical corporosity, but nnder no odder sarcnmstances kin we look upon de pnduct wid even suspishun. We believe dat de melon crop of dis kentiy fur de last five y'ars, together wid de way it was distributed about, has be«a de ^means of 'keepin' cholera from our doabs. Doan' leave any core stickin' to de rinds. " 5. We doan* recommend too much washin' an' eleaniu' De Injun am de dirt- iest pusson en dis airth, an' nobody eber knowed an Injun to have cholera or nnall pox. Kinder wash up now and den, an' sorter pcrub up a leetle extra on Sumiays, an' trust de rest to ciurrying an onion inyonr pocket. ** 6. Leave de wiodow np when you go to bed, frow sjme lime aronnd de back doatb occasiooally, van' when obleeged to drink water shake in a leetle pepper-sass.' IT WAS cAxmeD. Pickles ^mith moved that the report be accepted and the suggestioiis printed for gratuitous distribution. Whalebone Howker objected. He should aot feel eafe from yellow fever without in- structions from a medicall bureau. He would cast no alar upon the honorable com- mittee but what did a man li!l« Maj. Arnica LeSngwellr who was in the ash business. Prof. Kehote Johnson, who peddled fish, or Porous Davi», who blacked stoTes, know about epideoMcs Any man ni that lodge was liable to be attacked wit^ cholera at any moment, arad not ten minutes before he had witnessed' a samjrie case of aholera mor- bus in the blue a«xte-room. Sanamel Shin had mused 'harvest apples, cuc-jn»bers, ice water, pnger ale^ new cabbage, oid straw- berries and the eoeoannt crop oS I8S6 to- gether, and the reaalt was that he was still calling for some lamryer to come and make his wul. " Brudder Ho^friwr,** said the Ihresident in reply, " dematter 'was given 'to'dat com- mittee to iB\'eatigate. Dey ar' 'posed to hev performed deir full dvty. Until tile cholera I lifts some member of dis club w« hev no Immoral right to -go back on de report!. I shall of Freskon Stunmei Besort Springs. and Miaenl Prsstonâ€" one of the prettiest little to'atDS in Weat- em Canada, with its beaatif ol, cool, skady walks and drives, its lovely valleya, with the ckanaiK little river Speed flowin;; through it until H reacbesthe Qrand River, bag long been noted lor its odebrsted Mineral Sprhig. The remarkable csrstive qualities of Oie bathe in the most obatinate cases of rbenma- tiam, kidney and liver complaints^ neuralgia, akin diseases of every description, as wdl an its recapera- tive powers to the bnareas man seeding qoiet and rest after the year's labors, can he testified by h'ond- reds of our prominent citizens. The Hotel, aitoated on a slight eminence in the qckiet part ot the tows, with oool, terraced srardeog, croquet lavrns. etc., is well adapted for the invalid or seeker of quiet sum- mer repose and rest. The acoranmodationa are moet comfoitaUe, with every modem cmvenience, the table flrst-daas bniiard taUe and livery stable is connection the rates lower than any otber summer retort in the Dominion. Its dose proximity to To- ronto, with low railway rates^ makes it the most de- sirable spot in Ontario for ou; citizens to spoid their summer vacation. Preston ci.n be reached br O. W. R. to Preston station, by Credit Valley to Oalt, with- in vbree miles, or by 6. T-H to Blur, one and a half miles. Tickets for Spm x» can be bought at re- duced rates from Branttoi^ 'Buss meeti every train at Preston station. .. end tor circular with rates and particulars to C, -Cuss, Uineral Baths, Preston, Ontaria Upon a -^yte being taken the seport the committee was adopted by aoi over- whelming majority. UNPAVORABBY BEPOBTED. Giveaidam Jones eapresed his iieadiness "JO report on tho^applica4;ion of Jessa Blalock and others, of Btizza-rd's Roost â€" a sabnrb of 'Birmingham, Ala. â€" in the matter of grant- ing a charter for a branch lodge. He had discovered that the petitioners we?e people ia-'very bad standing in Birmingham, espe- cially among the ' police, and that Bialock's sole object in establishing a branch was to spite Joe Price, the king pigeon of the roost. Brother Jones had been in correspondence -with old Pete Whiteiseld, the porter of the Florence Hotel, who hasn't slept' in a bed tor six years, utd h«s the largest bank ac- count of any c(^red man in the aity, and old Pete had replied " No, sah, ^aa' yea gin dem n^gers no churter nor ni^Sn.' Why, sah, dat crowd aii de tuffest lot of Mack folks ia dis hull 8tMt, an' dey'd hev de lodge room chuck full o' stolen ohiokeB afore it was a month old. I'ze 'speetin' ebery day to see boaf Kalock an' Prise htusg np far murder f In view of the circnmstances Bother Jbnea said he i^oold. report unvtwably on the application, and he was retteved from farther considtoatioB of the maMer. \. H» XII.ED. CoL Hardkem Ja^sonthen ysesented the Mlowing reeehitioB "ife«o2veef^Datd»Ii^^acharef Michigan, ^jnst adjourned, was de wuaa body of men ever assemMed at Lansing fer legal pur- poses." Samuel Shis swallowed i two- cent pieoe- in his haste t» get his montikopen to second theadoptiDB, Mithe PresBdHit 'wilted hiar with a look, and said " De resohishan am useless. It simply specifies what de people already know, an' hev n-ade^np der minds tei I shall, dtahse, declar' iih outer order, and we will syndieate to our sebttal homes, each passon takss' de ambrella dat belongs to him an' none oddw." Home Ttdrtimony. Many hundred reoommendations similar in ^ancter to the one given below have been received, and give proof of the great vahie of Poison's NervlHne as a pain reme- dy. Try it. Athol, Feb. 30.â€" We hereby certify that we have 'used Nerviline in our families, and have found it a most reliable remedy for cramps in the stomach, also for head- ache, and externally for rheamatic "paina. No hooae should be without this invalnable remedy. â€" ^LmcsCoiA. HJT.timA CJouB, J. P. The Bxperieace of Mrs. Petenk MnLPMnshadnia, lbs. Peters had chills. Ma. Peteis was saiesbe wds goinic todle They dosed her «iui pills, tnta powders and squiUa, With remedies wet. and with remedies dry. Ksny medicines lured bdr, Butnoae of them cored her. There names and their number nobody could teU And she won might hfcve died. But some " Pellets ' wore tried. That acted like msric, and then she got weU. The magic ' fellets " weie Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets (the orgiaal Little Liver Pills). They cured Mrs. Peters and now she wouldn't be without them. Bnstlea groTT â- mailer. Bon't Hawk, Spit, Congh, raffed dIzsIneM, IndigaattoB, IhiAfflaiatluti of the eyes, headache, lassitude, inability to perfom mental work and indisposition for bodUy labor, and annoy and disgust your friends and acquaintances with your nasal twang and offiensive breath and con- stant efforts to clean your nose and throat, when Dr. Sago's " Catarrh Remedy " will nromytly relieve you of discomfort and suf ^ing, and your friends of the disgutting afid peedless inflictions of your loathesome disease? ' " If women are really aiigels," Writes fl old bachelor, " Why don't they fly over the fence, instead of making snch a fearfully awkward job of climbing " A Square Statement by a Carpen- ter. " For years I have had a chest trouble amonnting to nothiiu[ short of consumption. I saw how others in Uke condition had been cured by the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and resolved to. test its merits in my own case. The results are so jAuTie as hardly to require a hitstock or any attper-ment in favor of this grate remedy. It does awl it claims It buUds up the sys- tem, support and strengthens where others fafl/' He adz " My recovery, which is now on a awce/oundatton, hinges entirely on the compass of this wonderful Restorative, having tried other remedies without a bit of relief." The barberâ€" "What yoo some of my • hair restore^.' " er â€" " Wl»t I need more, vorce from my wife." THE AS»E8S9f ENT SVJMBM liSrge Insursnee Oaim Paidâ€" Em J o i af s t- Mt of Mhe Mnlaal Keserve* Office of W. D. MiffVHBWB Co., Grain and Produce MerchaniSy. Toronto, 11th May. I3S7, J. D. Wells, Eiq., fmteral Manager MutvjU Urserve yuJM? I4fe Aisociation, Dkak Sir â€" We be§f to acknowledge rtseipt of i cheque for yive Thowcntd DoHart in full at daim ander a policy of insvwance issued to ns by the Hn- Dual Reserve Fond lAyt Asso iation for that amount, a» creditors of the late^GiAwin C. Fisher. y(e have much pleasure in bearing testimony to- the prompt and satisfactory manner in which .this alaim faae been ad justed, andat the same time to express OUST coniidenrc in your assoc'iatiOTi. Having an in timate acquaintance witfiyour President and' shiet oSteers, we know them to Se gentlemen of the ^jgh- est' integrity, and in whose- hands we believe the* im- te'estsof'tbememliers of ttte Mutual Reserve- are perfectly safe. WIeiBg your associaticneostinned success. Tours truly, 'W. D. MATrBsws COt. The way the English are talking " Sheold the British yacht ssmjner the Yankee Ubp- â- ^ower (By thff length of a foot wMdd suffice), W-hy. every up-Thames manf*iW sing in his bower.. ' OHi. thjsll beâ€" Thistie be -Tae* T" PaiȣSS Dteing. â€" There is no reason why everybody should not look well, when for »â- very small expense you can have all your faded wearing apparel cleaned or dyed alt the welli-knowndyeworkpef R. ParkerCo;, 759 Yoage St., Toronto, Ont. Send foir pamphlet giving all inforsution. Customer â€" " Isn't it a trifle large, Levi " Levi â€" ""Larrfi, mine frent t Gzacious UF you gesps dot Shpring seat on, unt your wife sees ij, your bosoiui'vill schwell mit; pride sodot she'll hef to- set dem buttons- forvartSi" Â¥OiJ?Kp MBM Buffering from the effects of early evil haMts, the result of igooraaoe and folly, who find them£et%38 weak, nervous and^ e^diaosted, also Mid DLK-ASSD and Old Mbn who are broken-down from the effects c abttie or over-work, and in advanced life feel tno.ooBsequencen of youthful excess, send for and RBAD M;. 7. Lubon's Treatise ozKlNceascs of Men, Th booK will be sent sealed to any address on receipt off two 3c. siamps. Address M. 'f liUbon, 47 Welling- ton St. 5. Toronto, Ont- Mrs.. Yeraor â€" " Matilda, who was that man yau were talking to last night at the back fence?" Matilda. Snowballâ€" " Hao- yer nebber felt de influsnee ob de tendes petshim^ dat yer axes me sis^b qucshuns " aWe, witiioat tike use of SSw »tol2a.m.andfh.mr:Ml^ oept ed MDundasStj .^ desiraus of soquirinTjS?' ANOTHER HOVlm" AU the rage in the states kti^' by maU 45 cents. CLEXEki,* of health, the enemy J^^^ Sa^r*^^^* ^4?»2r; ,9«"»*--,Wn«erahrjaW '^."iSIg'^tio'a^^ re^T^^!r--'oiK D*S|JS5ty,*8kJdS5!?*. I of the blood. 30 f,^ eet,l CO »»^Jdd«»iy Bef IBUO wsa B BATES UME OF STEtii.i. Sailing weekly betw^n!^ *40, $50. and 160 Return 35^^?^ -according' to steamer and accT mediate and Steeraga at lows* „ partioulsrs and to secure "'rtb IIPKRAT, General sianag, Square, Montreal, or to the Lv5j fer«Pt ^own? and Cities, Awnings! tail, I m CAI n COMPOSrtTlOJJ GOLD â„¢, ULU» Natural Wood, and otffl Room Mouldin-fs, Franses, eto srravings Etchinff-i, Artotj-pes Ai Mirrors, etc. Wholesale and RetTi alogne. K.^TTHEH'S BBH. dw need, sir, is The Custom- di- sir, IS a ASEWS-Ladlcs or Cenliwe.! c. ^^ Canvass for our SubseriplJM Stan'anl and popular work, Dr Withrert oJ Canada"â€" a book which oii?httobeiiie» Our instructive, amusinp and coul-toiichi ance book, "Platform Echoes," by J. b complete book of sermons, and autobioo P. Jones, with a short sketch of the Wei Sm»ll, and three ol his special sermoni Oi book of poetry and literature of all asajs entitled "Golden Thoughts on Mother 1 Heaven." Our handsome Faniilv Biblei'lii, lustrations, full of useful and helplol, Bible study, bendefi good clear type ami » terms are liberal. Send for cireulara WILLIAM BBIGG3. Publisher,! PRLPH Bnaiiiess VoUege, «â- Tw«lve States and Prorinces already on the roll of this Institution, To thor., tical instruction, and the efficiency and m, cnraduates, this CoUejre owes its popularity gi'ving terms, etc., mailed free. Addrea M. MxecmcincK. NC LONDON GUARA1I AND ACCIDENT GO. (LD-OFin Capital, £260;l)0fl. Dominion GOTemmeiitt £55,000. Head" ©fflce 72 King St East, Ta Gentlemen of iofluenec wanted in uire districts. A. T. McCDRD, Resident; Secretlarv fwUie I CHURNS.^, kinds 'Washing llhwhines, 2 kindB, CarpetSi Meatchoppers, Trucks, andottiersundria. Hajiil'TOX Isdubtrial Works Co., Haniilt(iii,0[ Send for article wanted or Illustrated C Catagnrli, Catarrhal Deafness an A Hay Fever. Suffesers aie not genera ly amwe that these diseasst are oontaywws, or that they acs dm to the presense of living paimsitss in the linisg membrane of the ncae and eusftaehia n tabes Mioroacopic tesearch, however, has psoFsd ttis to be a fact, aaA the result is thata simpla rsmedjr has been fonuilated whereby catanA, oatanhal deafness and hay tsver an cured in ftom one to three rimple MtpUesttoas aiade at home. A pamphlet e'rphiinW this aaw treatanent is sent tsae on reonpt of stamp oy A. K Dixon k Son, 808 King Street wast Toronto Osasda Afiarasers of Plynoaiitili, HI., angry a^hie cow, endeavored to kick her on the nose. She- towered her bead., and he impaleflhis leg; uipoB her sharp hens. Peopls who an snbjael to bad bnath, foul ociatsd tSBgvs, av any disorder aCtt»Staaaach,oaii aS. once hs-telfiSTsd l^ ming Ss. Gassoa'S Stoiraidi BfMeis, HM old aad tried rsmady. Ask tout DmvxisI: CiMik (on the stay after her anwal)^â€" "-Please, mum, Ila a bit fienr at tirsen, and Jwhea I am hery I'm M»t to be a bk,Beagh- spoken, but yoa needn't let that f tit voa abesifc. With a ISktie ]^esent now sad then ye« can aUns InriBg me rouQd agaia^"' Wheasrer your Stomaeh or Bowsls gsft out ol ot d«t, oaiisisg BiBsnissss. Smepsia, or Iad%estioB â- od their attenanft svils, take si onoe a dose of Dr. Canon's Stomaoh Bitten. Best tamBy madieine. AH Dmnists. 60 canta. " Oh, my friends, there are sone i^tecta- des that a person never forgets " sud a lecturer, i^ter giving a graphic description of a terrible accident that be had witn^sed. " I'd like to know where tkey sell 'am," re- marked an old lady in the andienoe who is always saislaying her glasses. LADUS Who an Weak, Nervous and Ezhaosted; who fee tfaemsrivaa loring strength; who an pale, delicate and aithr in sppearanoe, suflering from the many coa^aints aeasUar to waaMM-send for aad vead M. T. LUBOms Treatise insoos rouf on the W s e ascs of 'Wmmm. Mailed aealed and seoiue fran ohaervation on receipt of 6c ia stamps, uir- ssAum rssB. Addreaa, X. V. unlMH, 47 Welling- ton St. East TweKte, Oat. A. P; 354 airy Safl FOR BETTER) ETC. "WkTEW Importations.â€" Hig^ns' E^wb, fd Xrk ton and Ashton Brands, in lar^e orsad^ Also Rice's Canadian Salt. Write for ^ring. JA9IES PARK SOX, Wholesale Produce Jlerphants 1 RUBBErSTlm^ cils, and Bumiiisr Bi-a«d», it. for Catalosne. BARBEitBltOi| Srscott St., Toronto. IVIILLER'S~TIGK DESTMY STOCKMH:?, givethUvi paration a fair trial. K pre mptly and effectually in di Ticks and othf r vermin pests, as in eradicating; all aSectioriill skin to which Sheep arfsobfftf in Tins at 35c., 70c. and SI. .\ 25c. Tin "II ' Sheep or 35 Lambs. HUGH MiLLEK 4 Co. yclei t-BND AT ONCE TOKj of Seoond-Hand j S' Fmui $15 I P'" NswCatalofrne Ready isl" A. T. LANE Ml HUE ZK. covery c fnt a?e for le the l!ii«^ uringallS*-*. :r ani K-iriwy ilaints. A Ulood Purifier. Haiuiltoa*"' leen Benefited leiMriSR 2 Robert St, |ofErytipdM°^,„ itanding; 8 " lell, -2* Sonth, aughter cs) Jpilepti?â„¢ -ears' su3eniir. lie Birr«l, a* .nut St. cra« Wedknessand Lung Trouble: John '^J^.L cart St.. cured of Liver Complaint and »» osed only 3 fifty -cent bottles Mrs. •'• "'-^n." St.. troubled for years with Nervous Prosit^ ji smaU bottles gave her great roliei. »°'5 '"L^.tor F, F. D.4LLEY CO., P»F BLOOD w-«^^tk Frencbiw ^*"tfrey»e;* "^planato I need Seur. »»»â- '^SSkinridi r band, do L Let J^lwho has ae, the r« 'which y»» • to be an this mon -tar which " "^^^onal Bupel fi^what can I me!" truce to warmly' "and PePP?" UUe machm ivou no .ttked, fixing Vtfonet'B £ac« kutthe m»g»« gUace was Lfieyeeemedj L-ierepUed • Then take nted, miserab J 1 Yon will 1 i can for you. you have he »y agtan. tak« 'On the conti howiUbethe f make this mt ie, and canno There which you w I moment. lAnd why! oa have pi ^nt This I have been Canyon 1' ikt she is •wro Of con ith of her w fulfil my coi Because I )d your word, foo, I claim n " And in go iHector le Gau The group a lly at Lucrece, wsrdnow, fa jherwith an v "Andwhal to do with m " Much," joii know wl "Aservan room by mi enlighten m« Lucrece s head back, table athei Fireyearsi mine, but y tothe ViUi am Lucrece Tud." "Andl "But 1 1 yonremen) usdtomc "Yes, 6«tlierâ€" ' gBnUemaa tioDlhav •due to] The Fi nored^' npUly: Mk yon Qsasriev lOaiCha I RTHDAl BABY'S A] to any Dans »»"»" "XnTMbabie*' names of two or more ottf "^a^iaie x. .^i.t..uuo« Also a ?*"_„tw f A Bcutiful l"Portel^r^^ at to any bab» whose •"«*2b«He«.»»"!l names of two or more ojif "^^ mo^ Dye Sample Card to mnchTalnableinformatao?- Wells. Hlebardses *^ Eim^ AD Classes of fine work. Mfrs.oiri 8fa« sad Metal Fnmimre. Sec«»"^»^ "Were sqnall?" yon ever csaf^ in a sadden uked an dd yachtsman of a wwthy citizen. "Well, I should ratho- think so^" rensonded the good man. "I have helped to oriiig op eight young 'one." DATCIITC ForSaleâ€" Illustrative descriptive^at. r A I Ln 1 alogue free. B. Chamberlin, Toroo^ Gâ€"u uvB Acnvn wAnra» in evert County in Oaaada. Addreas, A i)9,i S7 Churdi St, Toreate., m. CASES •F comiMPrmv cvseb without a failure. Addi«aa â- MILLBB, M.D., 18 Bast 11th St., N.T. City. THRESHIMG ENtJr lE AFUlLSUFPMfSE SONSUIiPTll •««aoT, ttot I *n «nd TjroBOWi^ ^^ WWI • VALUABLE 'S^^tSSn-a :.;:^..Vv_.