r isSut'thc The capitslof Hungary. where I sm`.now_7 a spending a tefwvdays. has distinguished it- " - self among the cities of the globe; by`estsb- f lishing a telephonic newspaper, which has, now been in exlstencesome months and is extending its plans and hopes. V The.0rien- tal Review of this city gives a long account` of what this novelenterprise has done and may do. which I am sure will interest my readers. The whole city of 500,000 people-- as large as Boston and I may add quite as handsome and better served with street- railways--is divided` into eight sections for the purposes of this telephonic editor. and. each of the sections has one conducting wire. The apparatus in each house occu- pies aspace of about Binches square and , has two tubes, so that two members of the familycan get the news at once. The whole cost of putting it in is $6. and each sub- scriber pays a rate of 6` cents a month for the special newspaper service. Tkn nnnra nnllnnnw .11: I-n urns-It In than n"'.a"a.`.';n... """&1u`; u. .1?` 3` um I or w e t- v ~13 andngr-plamontl in connection thonowith. 'Y`tI'uehs4-uavg tfntho heat 11.11. Burla. 31rd goior went 0 t. o e on at eve:-yth n :1 good ordv-r And .1 Le business A I. Eatishotory I` none for Iellinlr. j T .1 _ . -4--- __----- China Silks, 25. per yard. _ . ` % Lovely Art Silks, 70c.,e 35 in; wide. ~ For Draperies, also Bengalines in all shades, for Ladl Underwear I keep the best stock in town. i Stationery also kept in stock. ABUTCHE X - -s`A~1') MONEY s'roLEN._--Notea . . Vu-. wn on Mean. MoKeido&Oo a;Bsnk. Y" " --u I in favor or James Reid. Luann- ~ :'n:de by Thou. Clayton in furor of . ; -_iv1nsmnfo1-I45. I36 nuboenuatd on J1: .~ . ,t.hB. `public are cautioned; against A izinrthoabovo notep. JAIIESV EID. .,`.q ` V QK.Q In Fresh Fish Thursday, Friday and Saturday of each Week. )wATsou & LENNOX. mther thzui suffer` dam moval. ages by lime, mortar or re- Large assortment Canned Goods and Campers Supplies. " tarsus`--us ;-_- CORNED BEEF SAR; ' OHIPPED BEEF KIPPERED HERRING MUSTARD SARDINES. Our belief is that the biography is a sort of advertisement The compiler receives very generous `help from a multitude of nite insignicant people and feels `con- : rained to publish the letters they wrote to the victim and the letters the victim ` wrote back to them. So the gentle reader is asked to take interest in men and women " whose importance it is impossible not to` magnify. If only biographer: knew whet to omit. things would be so much better.- Dgll "nu" l1-...A.a.- WA[!!!!.&,.LE!!N0XJ 'l`ho- -d (1 wish to f hll %n*thut'ln|r`.'|Bi`n.:nanu. a.:.n...- 2}. .1? u... cam-:Rs TAKEN IN HAIR woRK._ FOR SALE. to Loan. $25,000WORTHOFDRYGO0D8 3| Clearing Sale of our Entire The gradual development of our business de. Amands of us greater accommodationafor our very large `stock. We are forced to further enlarge our premises as well as to make important alterations, fandmust therefore make a cuunnuuo Envy. ,v` V _ Managing Editor-You say here that you have cultivated hothouae lilac. bushes that Iavo attained a height otover 50 feet? ` Horticultural Ed1tor-Yes. Why? Liunaging Ed1tor_, (x_nusingl:)--Nothing I only.I wish I could lilac that.-'1`exas sync: F or` the Greatest Baygains ever offered 'Fo`r rsty-class New Goods Building Alteration At Glearing Sale Prices TOMATOES CORN _ K Property. 5;; .1? ZN:.'3....-e.."1`....`31`n fie-9. CENERAL GROCERS -:- Stephens IIHU IIIJUUU-Ia IJGVVHJTEIWI ace V IUCI The news collector es his work in the night, as elsewhere. and at 9 a. m. he takes. his post in the central station and begins to tell his story `Fin a te..-graphic style, sum- - mary and precise, avoiding everything su-V peruous. At the end of five minutes, fearing lest some of his subscribers may 'A not have heard everything, he repeats his budget" of news, word for word-mostly concerning home events and news of Hun- gary. At 10 o'clock he issues another oral edition. this time of foreign news. Atlll o'clock he lets us know that the Hungarian parliament is in session and may mention what is being debated. But" word may also come of a riot. and by noon the alarmed subscriber may hear that the populace have . attacked the police and been fired upon. This. we will say, causes stocks to tail 5 per cent. Immediately thewise subscriber rushes to his own telephone and gives his broker an order to buy. At 2 o clock the central editor rings furiously and reports a violent "debate in parliament, which leads to a change of. the ministry. At 8 o'clock there is a fire in a building of which the subscriber is part owner--and so it goes on. "A" thin noun: 7 anon In`! ans-In-nu HI---.. SACRIFICE PRICES. V Joan Gonnow. "BEAN_S`_ ANDV `This means a sale of "FEAS To be offered at SALE El 95-279 Stock. rapgpuounc JQUBNAUSM. UANNED PUMPKIN S. ' . PEACE ES I `711 SARDINES IN OIL . LOBSTERS. Tall: and F lat! S`M.91. ..... ... NILVG % %m....""`.....'.:"" .000. . H to loan on nrgwmort ssevlc? `78! .lo,ne.'Aooounts oollecte . 9- NS Olmon. -- om HENDERS0 Btoro. V I mm ` .-_.m,. . ,- nu vvn'1`.Inl.al.)l) uu'1'u.u. Fusn w-* ' O0. Ocpltll. 3500.009 ran ncqNomoALrmm1`NsunAI~'CE `RED 1 J`! m8URANv(1`pY.}&1gITs AND coN- ` Roplilentthetonowing Cmpnnies : THE SUN INSURANCE opmcl 0* The oldest purely line Ins. Co. In the worilm run IN8U'IIANOE OO'Y or NORTH AM CA, flnnltnl QQNIINII, |8oRO0OI In sum! sun JLVUUISANUIE U11 ! U15` NUII1 n `-P ma. capmn, s3.ooo.ooo. . oo PER Ilnnourrnau-mm 1NsmuN0F 0-mun Iuosoo : Government aepow m ` ` 1'!!! WA'l'IBIab0 MUTUAL mm! IN? A-Innnn n...u-n umnno. Bayfield Street, Barrie. IA..lJZ\.I PINE APPLES. ` ~JAMS,E1`C. The 1`;-fnblo with Biographies. `.. I__II-I .1- LL-` LL- I_.l_.___L.. .I_ A Y]. \I L` ' MACKEREL, ETC. 330 ~ It "e.&`1-Ia: *1" son SS . Gnxg in: His 3 will con withthe sugagd The Matter of Flesh Food. 3 is no real reason why a jpupp , V bred and fall nhnnl nnf. In. an Mr. ' friends The `he ['21: \- Sund_a.y 4~VMr_'. pulpnt a evening M rs. of Mrs The defeate 'byasc Monda Our ed lat are cal to our of havi mer ye ("I \ numbe ' panied ed -livi of this` V preach which was in march pic-ni.c was a games ing ev Amanag the s availe being heart rst p ' part_n Miss secon Infom m.n_ -. JD`-y . AA 3Wll;V'fIV'1tIt '1":-ip. Hartman` "at---1`--- ._L.!`-I. I.-. un`Z`{- ful [wives LL- L, sail`, boat, of a 1 who Af. >V'I'C3 theb4 wag; bega them woult put. i that in ex "peril ?1?r1 resid town mart nesd mon Presi uncl blor ckcu siste the I)avi taste with gues the agar twe nu m for .Ths= Mrs. Wil and Cilr Juunimo ihvy: , .llI.1Iu...' 17--- ____ 1. ,_,_ .1 e.::q uvu, vofv -.wuuua_L_u B L ulna UUITBBPOIIUBDU says, 13 qmte false, as tho crucgx `is fortunately intact ;- but the Director of- the Conoiergerie had it recent! placed. under a glass bell to `prevent at `of _ possi-V bilityof any` daririg thief a'mon ` v the; -visitors one day carrying of! Ighe -re c. ( ' teen broad and or unknown depths. . An English watchmaker exhibits an I engine 0 122 distinct pieces (not includ- , ' V 33 bolts and screws), which could be i hi den by a lady's thimble. ' (`T\n-CI . Il -.`-..A.... ll _ -.'.Al. , A no Recovered After Twenty Years. Mr. Hicks Gibbs had a curious experience in connection with thieves which encour- ages him not to dismiss all hope; Many V years ago he had` his watch conveyed by a pickpocket. After an interval of 20years he received from Scotland Yard the works of his watch. the only part left. - The police. making a raid upon the house of a notori- ous thief, found carefully packed away a collection of the works of watches. They ' were submitted to the various makers whose `names they bore, End the tradesmen from whom Mr. Gibbs purchased the watch traced the accountin his books. The works. minus the case. were returned to their own- 'er.-London News. -Tm`-I-)"e.;i`i."s -h?[:;i'n.t,;:s"i`1.1.,""` Vifnp , of Mon- treal, known to geologxsta as two , Trembling Mounta.m,"'1s gradually: vsinkin` . into tiagkieartlfa crust, tbs trem '11:, q ng `_`groa.ns 1 an ' noises reported being tho result, * j I ` __.._-v ---A-----were - vi uvllll. - 1 }'. A Frenohmorning journal has.airm- } ed that the ivory crucifix employed in j her devotions b_y Marie Antoinette dur- ; ' g_her detention at the Concierge:-ie ` had been considerably mutilated` by | British tourists chipping o pieces to 1 loan-y.a.wa as souvenirs. That a.sser- ; tion, the A d9,rd s'Paris. correspondent save. is mute false- us than nlinniv -;. t vulva ' A An Italian who lately committed sui- i cide at Santa VRoea, California, left 9. statement to the eect that he had no ; education; and `that a man without one 1 1 had no business to live. 1 country,` van It mey_ aesu-ea to do so, because at prestnge 1n the ,Inc1iee `would be aect d by such 9. course. The country wn , however,- pay inthe end for the trouble and expense which % the conquest entails. Is there no way by which this `economic rent can be made to go for the benefit of the whole people, ` by whose exertions it is really caused to I exist? Odd Facts nncilrlgnree. ~ The word girl occurs but Once in th % Bible. _ ' . , Over 8000 women are employed in` the railway offices of Austria. _ -0 mm mm mm |...4...... -_- -_L_--4, - - ovv u-J vs-nvvu VA GLQDUIIIIIO '*,ooo,ooo,ooo letters are `estimated to go through the world s postoices in one 1 DD? JU5o The cost of a full-dress uniform of :11 English Cabinet Minister is about van T * up can vvunlnnn "For the rs? ti':'1'i'{; the history of` Belgium, it is said, the principle of a monetary compensation for breach of promise of merriage has just been es- tnhlinhn, ' % i51``s` Za`." Inw `D 'plIIv Lflyo ` An m;;a2H :v;a1low. which had its nest jnatarm near iR6uba.1x, was caught and ` taken in a cage to Paris, where it was to- `It returned {tq ;it.s"1iest in 99 min- uIt..e.s..r having 0! W .% I`.F`F'F*..Y *1" m ,9mii#*9~ L coo -vonunnw use There are several dozen men in Lon- don who earn their. living by catching` rats. They: are mostly employed at hotels, clubs and restaurants. ` _ The Hollander: have waged war. with the Atchinese ever since 1873, yet it has been impossible to subjugate them. `Had the been united under one Government, I-Io land would have long since establish- ed a strong administration. But it is simply a guerre d Poutrance between every sin le_ Atchinese and tne`Holland- ers. Sti . the latter oannot give up the countryuen if they desired to do hnnnnun .nii~ nu-nation {n H... `I`....:.'.... vs-w wvvw. The lalrgest cut stones in the werld are 3 in the Temple of the Sun of Baalbec. Man are more than sixty feet long, 20 ; feet road and of unknown (land-.'I-no ` i can u V U5 'u.IUl uuanug BIWUGILI Thus the poor arc growing propor-r `tionately poorer; and the monopolht rich are growing richer-fed by the productive labor of the poor, for which they give no service in return. The process is largely an indirect one; thus ntsoggerations are not popularly under-. st . ' (LT- -L -_._ 7, 7 I ' ' ` gyvuvo. _ "This effect will be produced because . all these great inventions tend to make labormore roductive; but as labor can- not exert itself without access to the natural riches of the earth, and as these are mono lized by private owners, the latter w` I not allow labor to utilize these natural riches unless labor gives up the greater part of the increasedproduct, by accepting wages; thereby increasing the `economic rent, which goes into the ; pockets of the do-nothing land-owner in 1 an ever-increasing stream. ThIII f\l\l\It nun ti-Ann:-non vvua upvu. UUUUIUU ll gfli seap(l_'E.. Commenting on the above, cotempor- ary remarks: It is a great pity that the main benets of these wonderful im- provements will not go tothe industrious . people whose hands and b insvput them into operation. The main benets will 1 go to increase the . already enormous i wealth of those persons who own valu- able, city lands and other similar -mon- opolies. H'l'hu .;'n....+ ...:n I..- ....-.:.......a L. ..... -- wnuun up Lauzun U1 Buy wu 1111193." ' ' Mr. Edison believes that `Chicago is to become the London of America. early in y the next century, while New York -will 1 be its Liverpool, and he is of opinion that very likely a. ship-canal may con- nect Chicago with tide-water, so that it will itself become 9. great seapouit. Cmnmentimr nn thn ohnvn nnfAw|nnr_ vsvu an ulv B|ID6U"UU-Ull IIUW Mr. Edison looks further ahead than this campaign, f0l`.he said: "I think it quite likely_that I may tryto develop a plan for marine-signaling. . , . . ' I should use the well-known, rinci le that water is afmore perfect m ium or carrying vibrations than air, and should dsvelo instruments which may be carri upon sea-going vessels, by which ' they can transmit or receive, through an international code of signals, reports within a radius of say ten miles. MI`. that (`.5-ninonnn :a GA and luxuries of life and I suppose the results will be of mightier inuence u n civilization than the development 0 the steam-engine and electricity have been. It will in fact do away with steam-engines and boilers, nd make the uaeof steam-power as muc of a. tradi- tion as the stage-coacn now is.~. MI` Innbu fnuvtlnnu nluan.-n:I `Lawn Playing Card: With One`: Wife. ` Binks-No use playing oaids with as worn. Ian. Women haven't the rst glimmer of :n idea of honor--no. am I've tried it with my wife often. ` `XTnlrn__I'd`I-ml Qkn `nnn\ 6 nhnun Ann. ..!...I emggaesgsgi ,0I`o:?I_.iI;(:r'e|i.ilA|:'g_`Vg!;` uuif ` Po'wer'VotA co_uig_ -Who Get; me l'\ !_torie_t.f* . "I h'a.\"e_ long been satised,:. e,saidl Mr, `T Edison; referring to his contemplated I plans for the, future, "that it` was possible _' to invent. an ore-concentrator, which would va~tly simplify the prevailing` methods of extracting iron from earth and ruck, and which would do it so much cheaper than those processes as to command the market; Of course, I _ refer to magnetic iron-ore._ . . . I worked very hard on this problem and V in one sense succ:ssfully,. for I have been able by my methods to extract this magnetic ore at comparatively small cost. and deliver from my mills pure iron bric;;.ets. . . . I had some ten im- portant details to master before I could ` get a perfectmuchine, and I have already g mastered eight of them ` ; .A.\,.. ._-..._ ~_._ 4.1,- .,.._ ._____;___;_g, _ IIICDDUCI C\J Clsllll `ll <|\-VIII. I "As soon 'as the ore concentrating business is developed and can take care ; of itself, } think 1 shall turn -my atten- .` - tion to one of the greatest problems" that i I have ever thought of solving`, and that 1 is, the direct control of the energy . which is stored up in coal, so that it 5. may be employed without waste, and at 3 avery small margin of cost. Ninety ! per cent. of the energy that. exists- in 3 coal is now lost in converting it into A.` power. . . . Now, that is an awful | waste, and even a ch ld can see that if this wastage can be saved it will result in vastly cheapening the cost of every-. thing which is manufactured by electric or steam war. In fact, it will vastly chea n t e cost of all the necessaries and uxuries of life and I results will be of misrhtier mnnnnn `somgor guuorgivs PROBLEMS Marlo TAnAto`lAnctto n OI-noAl.x. .1_-.. `L .._. -_.,;2,_ , '- Holdfmt II In Good Dog. l"I'-II.'.._.`I-___ `I.-.__ , 7 J0`Ioi aavvs Lu: vvvusug Uuuutlallllliliu A si ple one tha. is intensely interesting, a d that may include a number of per- sons, consists in blindfolding one of ` them and forming a circle in which all stand with hands Joined. A card is se- lected from a pack and placed where it may plainly be seen by all but the per- son blindfolded. He is expected. to maintain a perfectly passive state, while the attention of the there is fixed ex- clusively on the ca After a time the image of the ob'eot onthe card is sng-' gested to` the m nd-_and-vnamed. In one mstanoe where this experiment was -tried ; the ten ofdiamonds wason the card se- I lected,- and the zblindtoldedxerson, :bsin`g; I . ignorant ofitheobject deoi` Aedzupon`-,, deg i` J 1591* r`%1..dimi>nd8-t .y.%t`h_e 94!! hrs? .. as. thefye.-wo.uld be 1 :In:b.' ,df9Y.P8%th6..!i81|5.|!137"be&nti1`9`Y*`f ,nhntout mm theseys ;ibyllvtqldigg'""kid?" .i;'l 91?es. to = .1311; :dY!f.i1lj;tl19jm.e ; t ane'bindin2'%'with 8i`~hsnk9xhi9f4`s-3 The nl(;1rt.'o! weepin end: in joyful morn ; Events are not u at they meet. the night; In ofGod b puoln cum": bloat X13??? `the dart: 0 ever I` `-to light, His d but A! ri o....u.1 :'J. `y w'.;*'.. :.....`'a. .3`.'.`y s'. ;"f'; | 0. wait for Him, wait p:t.ian&ly.And rut. --DI|, Nnwmnn I Dl\JU IIGICO ' S.t down by your little one s bed and speak low and evenly. Weave a fa.nci- y ful but quiet sto that tells of pretty i fairies, and bir , and owers, and droning bees. and loving little boys and girls-'-these woo sleep to the wear but still aetivejpbrain, not with the su ocet- ing pressure of the gathering storm lit with luid ashes`, but with the soft clouds of the sunset horizon that change .from rosy pink- to tender enveiopin g gray, and gradually deepen intorestful gloom." - , - ` ` `rm Way II But. The snow: of winter nurse the ho tul corn ; ` Long patient months produce t e harvest this`; V The darkening clouds the IunIet e throne prepare; `Mid glacier-crage are nob rive:-I born; The tcmpeet'e tnckethe ountnin-face adorn; &'.lId09g9U$ minds are treuured gem: molt rare: 0 port seems calmer reached through storm: of V core. ' CI VVIILU UL I-IULIJ Winks-Eh? She doesn't cheat, does she? Binks--Well, not exactly, but she might is well. You see, I put up acertaln amount of pin money for her against a certain lot of garments of mine that need mending. If the wins. she's to get the pin money. And i if I win, my clothesare to be mended. s Winks-Fair enough. Binks--Well. every time she wins she V demands compound interest at 10 per cent a minute trom,the tlnle the game com- menced, and" when I win she sends my clothes to the tailors.--New York Weekly. - v-v.-o-v-'. -Expenmenta in ,te,lepathyM are In. favor for evening entertainments. A nimnld nnn that in in!-Annals and-.;......A..'.... Origin : Famous "Song. V How `.`The Lost Chord, perhaps the most successful song of modern times, came to be written is related by Mr. ` Wileby in "a touchin little story. Only a few months after ir Arthur - Sullivan had accepted the post of Principal of. the National Training School for Music he received a severe blow in the deathlof his brother Frederick, whose talent asan actor is well remembered. For nearl three weeks he watched by the , sicz man's bedside night and day. One even- ing, when the end was rapi ly approach- ing, the sufferer had for a time sunk into `a peaceful sleep, and as his faithful at- tendant was sittin as usual by the bed- 4 side "it chanced t t he took up some verses of the late Miss Adelaide Proctor, with which he had some years previousl been much impressed. Now in the st - ness` of the night he read them over again, and almost as he did so be con- ceived` their musical equivalent. A sheet of music pa r was at hand, and he- began to write. _ lowly the music grew and took shape until, becoming absorbed in it, he determined to nish the song, thinking that even it in the coldlight of day it should appear worthless it would at least have _ he pedto pass the weary hours, and so he -went on till the last bar was added. Thus was composed a song of whichythe sale up to now has exceeded a quarter of a million of copies. London (Eng.) Daily News. IIII\lll5IllllUU IJBIULIUI .The fact that every normal child cries out for a bedtime story shows that i its mental natureneeds it just as its physical nature craves sweets. You want to give -,your child pure` candy, so give him the unadulterated story. Leave out the fearful personalities, the grim and gigantic gures-these, even it they are properly vanquished by the gal- ` lant hero, are too distinct. for the crib- p side tale. (ACIA. _I_.____ L_._`_-____'I:LLI_ ,,, 0,, 1 1 9 ` IUIIVVVDE - Your name is Martha Rollingpin. Well, I likeyour manners, and if your reference speaks well of you I will give you a trial. a You will probably like a re- ference as regards myself. The cook who is leaving will answer any ques- tions you wish to put. You will nd her in the kitchen. I hope, Martha, that the character on both sides will lead to a lasting a gagement and to mutual .esteem. . Amorning to you.-Wal- ter Besant, in English exchange.- UL IIUVV III EUCDV UV! DIVU 0 Every night when I watch my little daughter working off the big thoughts that sweep over `her brain, as her tired body begins tovrelax while her mentality seems to be briey and. proportionately `stimulated, ' I tremble to think of the harm that cbuld be done to her or any child-for Mabel is not an abnormal child in any `way-by an ignorant nurse or thoughtless parent. ` 'l`hn font that nutu-u nrn-rnnl nkih-I l hold upo don't think mothers realize what an in-_ I wish I were able to write all the 30-- to-sleep stories that are told to the little `folks all over the land every night, said a tender-hearted mother the other day.- ` `It makes me positively sad to think of the small_brains that are` lled with dis- torted image5.' hobgoblins, ogres, giants, and the like, just as reasbn is loosing its in them for several hours. I uence upon a child's life, and even upon its life after, it has ceased to be a child, is exerted by this apparently triing matter of how it goes to sleep. V HF`;-ynvti nitrhl-. nvhnn T urn!-nk nan HI!-In -`vmm 5.55: n.;g;.;g.; iiiuis " day" appeared alivefy `little dialogn may have her character blasted for life den English servant` (`in-l.`-i' L; which a servant, on being; `engaged; manded in `her turn-a referencevas to employer's character. Why ~ not? servant runs many dangers on onto an unknown house. She may find self under a mistress" of harsh tern suspicious, niggardly, `dget , exacting, whose moods she must en me, or she by that woman's malignit . . But there areleven worse dangers. he may nd herself in the company of people th'Wr- oughly ba, lawless, depraved, and so rrtay lose her character almost irrettriev- abay. * ` he mistress in the dialogue is repre- sented as stricken speechless with rage. Well, but why ? I am credibly informed that no servant goes into a strange house if she` can help it without ascertaining the character of the e mistress from the out oing occupant of the position. ' You see, adies, when you allow your maid to open the door to the applicant you give `yourselves away. It is done in a- few words: A stingy devil. Horrid tem- _.... 10.... mmnininna not - nlmnvn nrv. words: A st1ng_v_aevu. norrm rem- per. Nast ,_suspic1ous catj; always pry- mg and so ing about. You. won't -stay long. r She's a good sort `and `I m sorry to go. Wouldnt go if `it wasn t to be married. Perhaps it would be well to make 9. virtue of necessity. The dia- logue should. have ended something as I lv x . The esh of mares was always eaten by A the Tartsrs. also by the South American Indians. and to a certain extent by ` their successors. the Gauchos. The latter have a theory that horse esh not only preserves but whitens the teeth. It is hard to imag- ine how it can be preferred to beef. for be- sides its disagreeable color it has a curl- ensly astringent taste.-London Spectator. ` Experiments In Toloputhy. __V___ ,A,`_ Q ... k-as OVTVHER `sib or If Bublel Bedtime Stories. Iyhlllll run. ` -Dr. Newmsu Hull. ,_, tv-iTU" (`nntrsotor 1 of a,ll'.kinds"of iexoavntlng in SEWER8.1,'ELbAb_`_._`W"Ll..; ~ I8:_lcI.'\`s . DRAI\8. &c.. Jo wot-hand general: r_enni.- - ing do?-eonahon notice; address ,- 9! D'0g'lup- ` 812.". Barrie. lat, gnome, -Gnu Works. 1 38-15:. -vnuu Dr. ` mt .1 ' Orderalefut - Dunlap `treeota promptly ll rV`V' IIBIDIPIFOI` and the patient in the not of breath . ` Throat. and Lung Surgeon. of 78 ojnl at Toronto A Lucsv -9 Lu: scan swuauu Wu] II puppy, properly bred and fed, ou_ld not be so good` as a rabbit. but` what Englishmen could eat as puppy! _ N or is it a merely sen: timentsl prejudice. It needed the terrible starvation of besieged.Pe.1-is to induce Eu- ropeans to eat rats and mice, which the or- dinary Chinaman regards as dsinties. It is said. with what truth we know not, that since the siege of Paris the taste of the Po- rlsian has been attracted toward such strange meats as horn and donkey esh, l and that the price of horse meat per pound i considerably higher now than beef or V II -at _ o_ioe. Sore throat. ohm `1ai1'iu~' `ix"u`1 c'6nanm"""'?5' `"i'1""'x mi 8| B _ ' ol nv 0 Oil 0 Enlurg :'l`oneil Pol gt the None. or. any other Nasal` Obtwuetgg: removed wlthent the" knife. * II-_ `W.-Inl-u4n4..._ :.III 3.- -W -- " ` - }%1'uauA s YOU WANT WINDOW PLANTS. YOU WANTBEDDING PLANTS. YOU WAN :PLANTS THAT WILL ,, GRO AND BLOOM. -. YOU WA T TO GET THEM BOTB WHO ESALE AND RETAIL. `I 9.9! The celebrated Toronto Biscuits. In fact anything you want. Cannede Chicken, Ham_ Tongue, Beef, Salmon, Lobsters, and ` . Vegetables of all V . kinks. A e 7 Condensed Milk, Tea,` Coffee, A Cocoa, Sauces and Pickles. i has in stock just what y_}1u \v-aI, DUTTON. ; ulvlv uwsnauvsul lllll-I VULIVUMIULIUK All this, I am sured. is dailytgoing on in Buda-Pesth. any more, by the aid of a. single wire of the State telegraph line our eentrsl station has been connected simul- taneously with the telephone stations of Vienna, Gratz, Brunn and Trieste, and in all those cities the voice of The Gazette : editor has been heard-clear, sonorous and ' with every shade of 1ntona.tion."-Budar Pesth Cor. Boston Advertiser. on lliutInooootOoIOIonoanon: U683 _Po n IIIIOOIDlII.IlOCICIl J OHN I T H; ` ALLAN DALE, ._HANIIl'AC'I`UR.Ill. OD-_ B y 211- 4"-1- lll|TTllN You Going 4' Camping ? Reef. forequnrters per cwt. Dressed hogs not own. .. . . Mutton Boring Lyb (:h'o:.enn per pair.. .. .. .GeanenerIb.... 'l`uw are: non In AIGBHRB (`GT 10.... u. Tur. eya net 11-..... Butter. roll. ccr1b.. .` Lard per lb. moan nnr dnz__... Eggs per Potatoes per Hay perton.................... Strawrer ton ..... ....... Tnll0W5 Farmer : Cake per lb. Wool, washed. pm-*lb...;...... Flour, Baker's, per owt.. .. ., Flour, family. per owt.. .. Fxour. past;-y, per cwt ........ .. Hatmeal, oer owr....V..... .. ... Cornmeal per l.V0._lu'l'6ul1I'uuul...'.. T (`altSkina.................. E.";'.'..' .3 Lamb. Skins 40 '_l'oronto fauna:-_n market. ` -' |fror._on'ro, July 4, 1893. Vwhe...-. -white estos 65 Wheahspring 62.... 63 covvnnoin 61-00: 6) What. no} on I I u o o Dav-lav ~ RIDES. Cow or'Ster, Farmer ;-, per cwt Cow or Steer. trimmed, per qwt heepskins each .. .. .. No._lGreenF|ides...-.. full Qlrhnn ,_ uuuguuq. 5:. van; IllU.IllllUK- LLIQVV Wli would Pall Mall Gwette. . ,- FLORIST 86 MARKET ` GARDENER. M5?`-l')F)' Au--- A 1:? ...v-u uuuuuuv uuv nuuu. .wumnc'on mu. In an `nu -no .;.. . July l_lthth.-gm 3.30 mm; till - `IIJII. The Grocer. -MANUFAO'l`UBIB OF- FLQUR ..-- '` Iv : V` un. W A SHINGTON Graduated In 187231: Vin- toris University. with honors. The name y-or uaused the, examination of the Ooliege of Pigm- odnns and Sn:-`Icons. 11%. Th I: mm" to. |pom%.i`ze.u.m.n3 I hf `nnnnblnlnnn DR. ii A snma'roN W radmtad in 1:79.. vi..- UIIUHIEIIUUI us yaxv vvvuun-'uuu BU ll: guns 0!]. 0 `All this news. says my author, irre- lated in a sonorous voice, easily understood . .-and. as there is only one wire. the sub- scriber is not vexed with "the hubbub of 20 voices trying to use the same wire at once. Still. it is a little fatiguing to get your news in such slices instead of having it all in your. hand at once. so (I. continue to quote). at 6 `o'clock he can take a rest (that is, the `subscriber can), and madame, his wife. comes forward to hear the report of a lecture at the academy; perhaps the repeti- tion, with all due emphasis, of a new poem. At 7 6 ciock the young ladies listen to a concert through The Telephonic Gazette. They can distinguish wonderfully well the A touching pathos of the Violoncello, the pearly staccatos of the violin. the sweet melodies of the ute and the enchanting voice of the prima donna. What couldbe more delightful and convenient? Alli-1.1. 1...... .............u 1.. .:..n.~.._-.__ __