all have the nest quality of English Paris Green made. zGuara.riteed Pureh This will lay him out. Use it and you will be satised. WA;|; (3'HgES,'CLOCKS, JEWELRY, PLATED-WARE, &o. NEWJEWELHYSTDBE ALL. WORK GUARANTEED. Repairing and cleaning of all kinds snd engraving done on short notice. MRS. L. STEPHENS. iFIRST-CLASS MAN IN CHARGE. seansusu All! GRAIN DEALERS ' ' I Have opened in the old ' stand} with new stock of Flour, Oat- meal, Cornmeal, Graham Flour, ' Bran, Shorts, and Feed of all` kinds, wholesale and retai1.l Groceries "and Provisions.` Everything new and fresh. Farm `produce taken in ex-i change, ;_ . T117 DUNLOP STREET, g Tnlnuhnnn A`) 97330 T-It V-v-v --v-r----v- ---- T,tho patient in the act `of b1-asthma.` Throat and Lung Surgeon, of 78 ccaml St. llhnnnn tn IVIIID 1'0 VDISEABIS acwrrn.-ecatarrh of the Head and Throat. tan-hd Deafness. Chronic Bunn- chitin. Asthma and Consumption. also loss of man. am-n thrust. Enlnned Tonsils. Polypus Sore throat. Enlarged Tonaua. roupuu of None. or any other Nasal Obstructions mlnpvod without the knife. ma wasnmarox. Throat and Lung 2.-==~,...;.2'.;...":.;.."::.'aa.:..9`':.r:2*:;; ..-.. .- .-v,.-........v- v- Anotlim` of the candidates WllO llol fl-Cd to winthc approval of a. constituency is Mr. B1`n|)(?t,B[1[`1eigh. He also is 9. news- papt-1'ni:m, having for several years done good work for The Daily Telegraph. Prior to this appointment he was attached to 011.0 of the IIUWH agencies, and came conspicu- ously to the front. while acting as_ W&_l` cor:-esp.m.1t-nt in Egypt. Mr. urle1gh_ 18 _ 8 patriotic Scotsman. with a burning desire to I``pl'(`S'nL the land 0 cakes in Parlia- ment; hutthnugh a. vigorous speaker, llg; as well as an incisive writer, he has hithenvow lailctl to lliul acceptance in thQ- 0193 Of hi` C(I1lllll`}`!Iit`II. When standing as 0. Liberal-_ Ulllfllllil. for the Camlachie division /0! (ll1LR},{'r`u\` in 1836 he was "defeated "159 \'oLes. ln his latest essay, as 8. labor .033} didute, he fared much worse, 3 having been beaten by an overwhelming majority, j": 1- " An in Mr. Broadhurst. .\Ir. llmzulhurst. will be remembered as ll` labor ropresentamive who had ' risen to` l\llI1lsteI'lztll"zlnl{-8. man who grew 03,0- und sleek, and somnolent after he :53 . State otciztl. With his strong voice, thxr - ml`1l1;n.\IN\r\ll. L.:.. L.....lol... nnmnlntinn. Surgeon, of Toronto. has gone to liuropmwnuru he i visiting the Throat and Lung Hospi 3 of London. Vienna. and Pu-ls. His return visit to Battle will he announced in the usual my about thnt time. Look for the date, I ! I- .a;_ SHUNG DRHUUDS, IIUHHING, GARPH3, mm: mm In. sAvInas'Eu. f INCORPORATED lam. SUBSC.RIBEDA CAPITAL 4 re: dug Iniioriu Paid on noponu. 'l'h_8oou-1:1 tor Doposlnon In a. Loan 1`-T ` -`-1- nnnalanlu ' The Potato Bug is here again! JUST OPENED OUT A LARGE STOCK OF WELL SELECTED Goals Well Bought are]-Ialf sold. POISON! un-V .n-.1`:-n- una- Telephone 42. ANOTHER "Iii-1 -In &aa-A--gov.-an-----, nhone 27-39. DR. WASHINGTON Graduated in 1872 at Vi-.- i ' tot-is University with 1 honors. The same year nassed the examination of the College of Physi- cians and Suraeona, Ont. , `*--""*r ' r I Sincel880. Dr. W. has devoted his whole time to the specialty of the Throat and Lung my I An -AH ' 0.11 VI-v 08868- The cut represents 5 'Poronn Respirator and ,A I__.__AI_.I.__. In connection with my Fancy Good: Store. I. Ma.cLaren, 26 DUNLOPWTSTREET. -Jwuc Ulllulill. VVILH mu IDIUIIE VUIVV . NU` culiar aspirates, his healthy. Q0mP131_3`_k`9,_ ' is closely cropped hair, and his dreu ll 0 a rural l:urd s, M r. Brtiadhursb would IIIVU , ' attracted a.tteution in any assembl . 'rhu`_h too subservient to the party glli 0B_, .lvl`" can be no doubt as to bl! capabilities. II D . legislator. Indeed, a. better man untol- leccually could have been much m0l`0 Pill V spared. C016 and Paulonleu lion-use Davey." In losing Sir Horace DIVOY i th. Liberals are deprived Of _ `P _ `cut. lawyer, though an a keen politicnn.=1"'{' ` pleasant speaker, the 180.0 mQ33`.b_." hr Stockton possessed no record-' -n` "" cold and paseionleu in bi? dl'f9" "1 pellant. in his manner enl;o`ilV:oI,l'_5__||; "d`-'9 monatrabive in voice sud, $11?`-."E`m"' Ml`. Gedge or Sir Jose h elI.it9W9`___I.PA"'A' The enforced oblou ty of M35 R-9."P", will save legislators fl'olh,.ll)l.l|.!; |.;.~.d`9i3l-- `Peach. It. wins this gen`tl6n1a. I t1I!f`."`-"" to visit Ireland during 8 gy excit.ement-when the 0Vi.l5'.'ii.V-1:9` ~ '5. llllf scelded to death by the `ov9iiI_$|gAI_-*'3_5 e never missed a chance of dIIcQ|1."{'3_E about his experiencel. N0$ m_0re monotonous t.hsn`-``| ` V `"86. and member! mu, }~l'9B`-L for a. time at loa.at'th'ej vi I infliction. 7:-=~8*``E=:- o: J.` DRUGGIST. MIILGASTEB STREET BOAT |'|0l|8E, BAR R I E. . Established 25 years. 9.QHN.QA]':EXL- ~ Builder of every description of Yachts Skiffs, Yawls. Boats. Dinners 8:0. Estimates furnish- ; edfor any style of pleasure boats. Call and \ exam ne my large stock before purchasing ` elsewhere. Having had thirty years exper- I iev ce in the boat building. I am satisfied I can give satisiaction in style. nish and material. 1n every craft turned out of my shop. Rnntn fnr him: hv than hnnr rlnv wank or OPENS uurneu OHS OI my 800]). ` Boats for hire by the hour. day. week or ' season. Yachts and skim; builtto order. New and second-hand ski s always in stock. Remember the name, l nuv unnu- J6HI'i'"1S:tn\RLEYI crystal SPECIAL! REEVES su.K _lfIAN_D`|(ER_Ql-IIEF in the diuouoannoo of '3`? runsamonra But -DcVtlI01 36 B6Bp' 7.:7zUa:r-yr ed oa.or before 13 noon. A G s'l'G.`1898.torPsintlngundKnlnomnlng the0ro'1` _ Hnll.onuido.8oootw insidosooat The but ydlwot analog! nut he L T1103: R. - . . A. rlgnnnnns will be rgivoa gyms under- Tendon fgr Pnlnng. Flnlshed - Wi;hi()`Il' &t on it. "55b|-;9*F ulixralfs lluun-.. m, July QO.--Thomug sex . -_ W: anti} , lie, h: us been elected to th ' ~H0uae of. n.~4 fur the Nortl d ' ' 95, 2023 nmj0ri:,y.wm?0f0pQ9"tY V Burke Parnellite p.9ltt. _ . I ` g - Vim "` ll . n-ton Elgcmd In Coumy Kn- ry;_., ., l'oliIi('u Eclipses-A Rumba: up Men who Have Dluappeaibd from POLITICAL ECLIPSES. l zu-liamenmry Reporter. The .~`ailor u Frlelid, Also a Newspaper Man. Notllblv Niel! \Vh0 H From the Ruth H` ave lIIuapp.ru` bun Ln,\`Im\'. Julv Q I ` 01' Oommotll. coxlspiclmlls sla.'in i; hn addition to t ``'e `"0 Several pI'c;mi" 8 recen electiohe lleut ecu no 9 rank and tile of the Br. . lush House ~ f Com. moms. sail , on l rIen'd_ as MAJORITY wi'Lu35'%`3 EXACTLY 42. V ' __- "``d_or tlymollb haqglut one of it: best. ' reso Tq` if-stru.ight., solclierly gura'jhe,:iIdd`bd 0. 011$ ' ' Wm?`-the`- A respecth xii men by speak ing only when he had I.onwthi,ng_ bgncd.-.1 The Rejected of it. Pmmrns. `Tlnbughsittiug beside Sir William-eh wgys on the from bench below t.h,e,Qgposi- Lion gengwa -3-Mr. Hiir1'y;_hn\vsoii~ P889119)`- ed`a. vsstly iarsnt.-appeigmahca ._ he re- jectedof St`. Pamcras w"as<'s" h`nrh, scout. and slightly bald, but with an amoutft. of vital- iby that was irrepressible. He took a great " interest. in the London Cou1_|t.yiCouncil. [ wumhed over "its interests on every possible ';`occs.sien`,and`.defended them in many a well-reasoned speech. Hevis a `distinct. loss to his party. ` nu-. nnullullr I UOIIDIF. ` Mr. Coghill, whose innings has closed at: Newcastle-under-Lyme, was remarkable for a. edmewhat curious resemblance to M r. Balfour. There .wu.eu. strong similarity in the shape of their heads; but if ou heard their voices, without -seeing t e "men, it was almoetimpoesible to detect a. differ- ence. i V > The Man win: a Hobby. . `Mr. Byron Reed : defeat will be most re- gretted by the Churcll. party, as he was an indefatigable worker, brimful of facts con- cerning his pet theme`, and a. man who couicj alweys put,hi.s Views very attractive- ly beforeeun audience. S6 with Mr. Milvain. Thoughvatyoung _ member the` wee popular with colleagues of all pa.rties--his recvzrd. of achievements being-far-above the average. Sif'4T. ' Sutherland n.nd`- Sir Jntnin: Rain uullrssvlllellvl neingiaraoove the average. _Su_" '___Sutherland_ and`-Sir James Bain are distinct losses .to_ `the. cause of com- Cl inerce; whilethe. lawyers, .through the dis- Z the Home Rule `asco in `I886 he became a Unionist. He has since aster to Mr. Forrest Fulton-g-,are `deprived of one of the. best speakers in their ranks. ' ._ V 'l`I0_l_'ot Be :QI_ll`l_I0d., A `With respect to Mr. Buchanan,he will be missed though not sorrowed over. After returned to the fold - ' as did Sir George Trevelyan, Mr. - Caldwell and Mr. Winterbottom-and like them has been conspicuous for the zeal with which he has championed a.once derided scheme. Inthe height of his` fervor, Mr. Buchanan could either op ose or obstruct the Govern- ' ment, and he id so with aglibness and ostentation which under the circumstances I were peculiarly offensive. Most of then 4 eclipsed politicians are sure -to be regretted somewhere, but they will be very queer people, indeed, who feel pity or commisera- l tion for the rejected of WestEdinburgh. I `lie Was Humility Itself. A short, pleasant-faced, quaint-looking ` ersonage has vanished from the Tory. 7 enches. There was, however, nothing ' noisy or turbulent about Mr. Baumann. .- He never raised his voice in anger, neveki ! spoiled for a ght, never was anything but I mild, and suave and humble. Yet this i inoffensive lookin legislator possessed a `l ready wit, could rop sentences that seem- I ed _to cut like a knife," and was able, .1 guratively. to scalp an opponent with the 1 ease of a practised red Indian. His I pet aversion was the London County I Council, and some of his criticisms on the I doing! of that body were productive of very. 1 lively scenes. ' The Father of the Parliamentary Steeple- ' l phase." I Concerning the two Conservatives who i `came to grief at Oldham, there is nothing unusal to say. Neither Mr. ,Maclean nor 1 Mr. Elliot-has can be described as_aggres- ; sive. At least not as `a rule. It did occa- sionally happen, however, that_ the big, i burly, ' clear-headed Anglo-Indian - the 1 nnntlnrnnn wlun hnnss ntinllhiss tho nrlitns-inl `lull , VICKI `IICWCII `I|I5I\l'LII|-IIZII j UIIII gentleman who once oc'cu ied the editorial chair of The Newcastle" hronicle-had to` ' assert his independence, and then oicialy frowns yand remonstrances were alike powerless to ` silence him. Mr. different stamp. Dainty in dress,| sElliot-Lees was `a; man of a vastly through li e lea ntly. But though he loved society in the season, he could ride hard after hounds. It was largely through his -instrnmentality that the Parliament- ary Steeplechase ? was established. Though not a big record for a senator, perhaps it will do well enough in place of a better. - a sun to uni Pltled. Amongst the rejected. who are most to be itied must be `placed the name of Mr. hilip Stanhope. He has been qualifying springy in ait, jau ty in manner, he went ! -for o$ce,eand deserved the distinction-a high mood of praise in these days. `Though he seldom takes part in debates, he can speak pleasantly, uently and sensibly. To lose his seat, aswell as his chance of pro- motion at one swoop, is hard luck. The nest Figure in the House. Cafptain Price, who has "gone down at Devonport, could boast pne of the finest gures in Parliament. Having made a study of service qnestions-espe_cially those relating to the na` -he alyays looked to for a speech, an the h1gh.op_In_ions form-r ed` of his ability werea1ways.;ust1lied. ` He Was too Virtuous, ' ` Caldwell has fallen because he was too virtuousfor any ordinary assembly. He left, Mr. Gladstone for Lord .~Hartin t0.n_ years ago, then he returned to the old. and since then his ponderous .disarihes against the iniquity-of backelidin "have been pro-di-gi-cue! He has now oat hls_ -..s,,a nnnnltv with J 'fBW D3I'I0nl . Jug been "PTO-(ll-gl'Uul 3 Au: new uuvv lvuv _....,_ lent.-gt naltry with; V,v'hic_h;.~`fe\_v, pal-coins will be ispoaed to quarr'ol.[- , - ;: ;.=, ` `g u . -. _L _' .___ v ; " _ .t\-..~ _-n_.. . As one nf the sailors of the asembly, Sirl John (_`(.ll>nIl) played a. useful and respected` mrt--lwing always on the watch for naval abuses, and always ready_ to amendhthem. He is at man of commandmg presence, an effective spuuker, an ea.rn_est upholde`r"of Englisll supremzwy on the hxgh seas. With our llal,l()l):gl defence as his theme, with mutf Admiral Field and suave Admiral \Iu\'l1e to cheer him on, he was ever in his `_`-.Z.....: null seldom failed to show that the N other_.:uDJe0wa _ . ~ ., L THO PNIS66 community of India, chiey Bombsy merchants, but sent 28,000 uter- ling to ~Mr..Nao1;oji, member-elect for the Contrsl Finsbur district division of Lon; dqn,_kqp0_s,d9en_ .er..9f. Indian MrI,|.vI ill ; -_--- rr.` gm. nnionht an Indian ml -` i'iif..dET"i'3'ini.'.e in; Prince add; 10,000. rm..- lnllmninn totlll 1'01 Prince nan: :uu,vw. _ .. _ The following total: rerrelent the entire ; vote cut at the recent` e ectione: Unionist 2,1-16,94:6,.0ppoIition 2,417,586. Vwronu,oB.C., my 20. -Ea.rly uter- dsy looming .W.. Wgitt, one o Vic-L torts : old and "well-known business mon,. died of Imtllpoxot his home in Qnadro-:1 L thou: Pouon. A-Ho` owned two _ `_ `:;:"j' of oon`nd9r- -II_3oiFIIm`$|I llntdor. . I 1nvGovornmfont- ? .. .. n An l`I-'.-.- `Ill! c`I7lIl I-II In vo than M Ashton. -~-- --a nun... fol} glr. Balfour`: Donblo-. .'.l..:lI ...L... 21 ` not intereqtl in1 P6 this amount on rnll " _ I? dlllflcb QIVIIIUII Ill JJUII; _ I 6 IIIII nnn ' >`$`D.liV3 Ieenin ~ ry Wagons lI`l`l[;`.A by electricity are Hum" _q,gton Elected Ill COIIIILV lCI`l`_Y.~-I T'smm_ 1\'un1be;- u_t-., the numppoarnd `he House. '- L(,.;,,;..\-, Sexton, ant P mlllte, has e1ect,e_d `t9 Lheouae o_f (,gn"n(,,,3 N rt_h dnvxslog of Qounty V 1)`, nmJorn.3_'. H13 9ppon}e;_;h,4 Kerry `Burke, Parnelllte, who -recewed ~ Mlsvjjl VHLCS. . ~ 9 ",I-.i ere |.;.ve now been elected 669 mem- berslof the House of Commons'o_ut.of the 670 Comprising that body. With` the poll`- in the Orkney Islands, w_l_nch take: lace next week, the coxnbests will be oyer... The parties now stand: Conservative: _.. n..n..eitinn 354'). ,.|;IIu|vcr_y Isgons run 1} IL :. _-:.I _._, g-use . :;:r.y?;:h.i1d in` Jasn is iught to write with either hand. L.:..J_.-'.I` L-`-'..L_1, '{\;>r:l.d?s:():(;;n;;e`:l;i.ibraria.ha is t.o'b hold at Clnicago next yqjar. ' T . 'I`h..... ...... .-.34-- -..:.I_~~__ :_ 17,... 17,4. -'.'l`_he-%;asi-xin(g7tonian, a new pnblication at : Vancouver, . Washington, is set. up and printed entirely by deaf and dumb boys. I. The city of I-Ialle, Germany, is building a church. the first one since the Reformation. _ The population is about one hundred thou- sand. ~ - ,1 I,_ AL- 4--.... nu w|uou' vuuu_ .B|LllB}' [Ill/l_(.l. _ (Six hundred` tel"e_p_hones will be in use on the World a Fpir grounds. ` " I \.'Vn-l.vl . .n"'|......--.;- `C. I ll... _:_..._ ;- ._-L; new at plncago . M 4 2 There` ar_~~m`oro"wid6ws` in New York` `City uh-an in any city in Europe. H - Thu V\;I\ 6'....s....:.... J LL- T7_.3AAJ C`l-*-- ---J VIICII u_- mu IJIVJ nu`*.l.l.ll'U!JU ." - " The pin factories of ._the United States turn out. A18,000,O0O,000 pinup year ! Lady Somerset. t.a.'ks muc'h' about Ameri- ca, but has refused to. write a book thereon. -.A cram. that died in the London Zoo- logical Gardens .h'adA been there forty-three years. ` f`|--l-:.__L_ ;1-_;_:_2._ ,- I DD ll\.I . Notice` has been issued by the town 7 authorities of Selem, Ohio, forbidding any girl to walk upon the streets after eight o clock in the evening. A Chemists have extracted from coal tar sixteen shades of blue, sixteen of ellow, _ twelve of orange, nine of violet, an many | other shades. I I 0`; A L , , A` P6o-<;king by lectricity is bencominu com- mon in the fashionable West. End ats of London. -w.-mu-u The Preayterian Geheral. Assembly re- solved in favor of closing the World s Fair on Sunday. I'\G LL..'____-I;- _ .;__.I_ _._ _ _...A:,, ., Al: -1 , /yhe pillLu; U`, 314; 0[)p:)si[i0n -30'; "`~--.-.. The relnwin. ` 1. '---.___`. ` lug " ' V~ wt in Certain to return so. snpponer f* Glads tones 30 ' the lat l t'er's 1114131,,-it - Y m the ' next H I be "(5'f`t:i1:-:[')eec1:xes made at a. meeting bf nbe Boston Boot and Shoe Club, five were by women. f - ` f"V".e'1';-st.k:.hegrin, the Russian painter, ie3 under treatment by M. Pasteur for a. bite from 8 mad dog. The largest, . telephone "switch-board in the world is at Berlin. There are seven thousand wires. - - -rac- ' HWEHJ?-;,'1-1-1;. 806,67 volumes drawn from Edin- burgh library, last year, forty.-three per cenb. were fiction. ' ~ .;.'<)x`1'avi<`i'o.l.s",'-;I:}.)poIogl to -be sixhundred years old, are said tolmva been unearthed among Aztec ruins in New Mexico. 1.. LL- _.._LL-_.. .......|. -1 T._.'l:_ _L--_ -.... A sleeping car porter in Chicago, known as Old Mich, `is sixty-eight years old and has served shes company seventeen years. Y run A . 1 . I1! - '"iIf?hI.'J{u}}E';3Zr?'i.ilifiiaeep are .` used as beasts of burden; some carrying twenty pounds up the mountain paths. ' A I ('11- 1 V ii71'(sft }r*1o7t)u7mehc recfed to E}hrist.o- pher Columbus is said to be in Baltimore ; itwas placed thereby the French in 1784. The -malyor of Doclgo City Kaunas", was ` recently fined one hundred dollars and for- felted his oice, for condoning liquor sell- ing. , D A _ _ - -.1....~.:- ftdln.-A ant` fl-un on!` mEf ennsylva.nia. College and the` Ohio and M Ann Arbor Dental Colleges are the only. ones that admit women to study" dentistry. on .-c 1. UUIIUI DIICI-IOGI New York city has built attractive pavi- lions on piers in the [Hudson river, where persons unable to go to the seashore can get In saltwater breeze. IS 3`. I TI,,,!J_ ` _\1ayl1e [0 CHUCI. uun Uu, no was VVUI Lu Iuo element, and seldom` 69 weal of (ix-eat and Greater Brit.ain was an aim \\' ghting for. ' A Warm Heart for the Poor. 0:`. u dinbrent stamp was Mr. John Kelly. 'Hwl1gh Lhls energetic gentleman surveyed mankind from the Conservative benches, . ,. ..n(\9l|;I\(T rptrnarnda Ahnnt. him I UNIV V1 wvvn vs vv-nu An orange tree near Fort Meade, Florida, bore seven thousand oranges -one year. Its age is unknown, but. it. was a vigorous tree forty yearssago. _ \ I "'`L. -`..nL-:n-pi 4-Iavuasiflrlnrlt A` un. I. Ua|u n5vo. The electrical department of the Patent Oice is so overcrowded with applications that `some received last fall are awaiting preliminary examination. lI"I.... `:nnIl\l|_Al|I nf Qinnv rlitv Tnnm._ nfu Pl UIIIIIILIBIJ Gauuunuuvnvuo I . The liquor-sellers of Sioux City, Iowa, of- fered ten thousand dollars for the ood fund if the city would allow" them to resume :business. The o'er was declined. - :1v'%JvcULLD~;E_I3oM ALL SOURCES. Rep;:;sen;s;vive-IV3siiZey, fonngest `member of the present Con ress, hails from Texas. He is twent. -eig I: years of age and has been descxibe as handsome, rened, and p1ctt3resque. T . A...3...uu (1 Annnann A Andi- PlUUl`||CD\1uw- ' A Andrew G. Anderson, a Swedish engi- ` neer, rescued twenty-seven persona during } the Sioux City ood. In his endeavors to save another, he lost his life. A monument I is to be raised to his honor.` ~_---n _--..-_-..-.. :. u... ID BU DU Inxuvu I_Iv unu Ilvnnvnu } The highest.-priced newspaper is the \ Mashonaland Herald and Zambenian Times, ` ublished at Fort. Salisbury, South Africa. B cells for a shilling a copy and -is printed daily by the hektograph. - I`..- A` `LA I$l\$.. llllnltl in it`? Of ` uuuy U] uni: llvnvvsauliuo One of the worst quarters in the city of Philadelphia has been repaired and made protable by a. woman who leased the prop- erty, procured city water and a library. This moral and hygienic reform has paid all expenses, six per_ cent. interest to the pwner, and three per cent. prot for the The investigation of a railroad accident in England brought out the fact that the engine driver had been on duty twenty- three hours and forty-eight minutes at the time of the accident, the reman eighteen hour: andforty minutes, while 5 responsi- ble workman who lost his life had for the eleven previous days worked from .-fteen to twenty-three hours. \o Ullvuv --.... _.-_. , u dollars. A _ Rev. Ida. Buxtoh Cole, lately of Misaou ti, -has assumgd the asborate of the Congrega- : ~:;o;.s1ichn:oh gt} `night; 111. - ._ > J ulia `E. T Bulkley, Mt. Holyoke .~%I&_dx1iate,ncepts-the oce of Dean of the " .__6ma.n u Collegaof the Unlveuity of Chi- lllllkllltl l_[Ulll Luv \/uuuvavuvsvv uvuuuvn, there \\';lH n0`hiug retrograde about him. He hzul 1 \\'ill`lT`l heart for the poor, never lost a cliaiice of advancing their interests, and tilli splendid service for destitute chiltlren on very many occasions. No matter whether the appeal came from the seller of newspapers, the hawker of, inatt-lit-s, or the vendor of button holes, the member for North _ Peckham was ready to listen and befriend. It would have been impossible for any man to fight with greater pertinacity than Mr. Kelly dis- played, or to have adhered more manfull to any task he essayed to accomplish. f- the wnifs of Peckham had possessed votes, their 'l`oi-y friend s defeat might have been avemul. The Juvinl-Faced Owner of Boughtou Hall. T With regard to the enforced seclusion of Sir George Elliot, it will be generally `do- plored. Few men were more popular in l arliamt-nt than the bri ht! and ovial faced owner of lloughton Hal . His hospitality, his geni:tltty,his irresistible good humor, I made him a favorite with members of all parties, and his absence, if permanent, will he rogartli-.1 as a distinct loss to the Legis- latnrc. Though he troubled himself a very little almllt the dry bones of politics, Sir lieorgc was keenly alive to the scenes and incidents that mark the progress of so lll&Lll_\' lllt'ElSlll'(S, as well as deeply interest- ed in the niameuvring by which one sec- tion ofhis colleagues tried to outwit the other. us_. ._I:_ .._ `non-.. `DA-`nu-On-I Dr._ Emma Chase is a successful dentist in St. Louis; ` d ` Dr. Sarah Cole hatbesn Imade health oicexrfor Port Aus,tjn, Michigan. - There; are four -thousand, ve hundred women typ_:sett;ers.it) England. ~ ` ' A ______ ............. unvnninnht hm: an nnisu-V- Women `ype9DBl'B lI_| J`Jl$uuIu- A A young women 1uV erinoht has an aipiary, and A-oh-ipn iponey to all parts of the couptry. 3 ' ' ' ' - Ca1i`forn1av5vox;1'ai1 ibvented a. baby car- '1;i.o:gej than haagt4I_et,le d he; fifty; thousand ._-pub1ianor_ox Ifnoruu u....... ,...,..... O! twelve hundred men and eight hunt dred women exnmincdby the'_Civ1l Service Comtnieeion, lust ear, only one-hulf tho inen passed, while ve-sixth: of the women were successful. ' , Mina Alice M Bacon, oi New Haven, has taught in the Hampton Normal School ten years without ealury. She does editorial 1 `work for the Hampton paper, eupcrviecu A the hospital, and care: fora motherleee Japanese `girl. ' Mrs. Steele, a colored "woman, hae'recent- ipl founded an orphan!" home for negro ildren 8hgie`iifty_yeare~ `old, and liiI`learIi ` wiroind nnd writcainco: heginning thitwork-.' - Twenty-four children ; 'I,,lfCf'l`ll0V`-'lI'llC"Gl`I\Il"0.*_::,.,L, f.'..t`. 7' j _' - ' llrI.'.,Enld_e'rni an,:of'8out.h Dahoija',_ bud. .a:clniu1' of wild `ea fevi`.y'ea*i'eago. . vshemar mode a paying farm of it; deepitnocn. Luv ' ..- -Sana I Ig'I'00lI'l- DUI! up .I|vvr vu..- .;pub1`i :l.1'o1_'_of Q-North Dakota papbr. 0! twblvo hundred _q|en Hivvnu--v ~ I Yigttg ~ : - V Min Vinnie Hall begsnjifg "3175, ty . utter, sndwu noon.mudc;_fore'wo`nisn o a 6ws=e.-ins-:9':*;--":..2.:.`!;.:`?.5`' "` Co1`1'grt I 3;. Birna;n- rool;,_ V\ ip... as grown _:-apidl under the horns. of the Reverend argues E1. \ .. ` WOMEN'S wo'm.o. Jan 3~IoRrHmm ADVANCE. mADSTONE S _W '5` 35` 5% ' I`; auqqessful dntist FRANK HE;AL_E;;EYh" um govgsgiyu RES ` m AFRICAN: w'L~os-`gff jvomrmrs IN? AFRICA. The Stanley of the World Tells `Trapping .BIonlsey's:A.:sIir'l'._)lonstfiir Lions 1 Ho Captures, :I3:oai1A(v`.on`str l:ctors- ' Fifteen Y.easr_sof,'l`ra_ve'i1.i_`_ n` A A I A A Frank Healeyshss been in the wi ds of _ Attic 38359;. after various sorts of beasts. Of course, anybody can go into the wilds . of `Africa; the diiculty is to `gel. back again, and the astonishing thing about Mr. Healey is that he has returneci safe andsound no less than forty times. He is full of good stories about hunting queer, |mma1_s_ and he told is number to a. New York Recorder "reporter a day or two ago. His hunting is of at more difficult sort than the ordinary, because his purpose is not simply destructive; it is instructive, so to speak, for he brings his prey back alive for us to look at. Th us we get some knowledge of the jungle without Ethiopians spears, a . `yard or two long, thrust through our,` Vitals. ` Mr. Henley, the African Ahuuter, isa. man about ve feet. eight inchel in height. He has an English cast. of countenance. His on`: own vuonknnn k:n rnnnf fI`:`7:r|lV f-anfllrn IIIB TII IJLIHIIQII I435 VI \o\I|lIJ|lIIIlI`4Wn J-Lil` 1 eyes are, perhaps, his most striking xeature. `3 They are deep brown, and are extremely rnnnlntn in this man [how Inn`: nnf, nnnn tho LIIUJ GIG LIUUP uxuvvu, CIIILI G16 CALICIIIUIV resolute in the way they look out upon the world; A long sweeping mustache, of 1; deep black" color, sets off his face to great advantage. Mr. Healey is bronzed by Africa.1f'suns. His form is somewhat bent, under stress of the hard life he has had` these many years past. ..cv 1 v an A1 .I How do I catch monkeys '3. Oh, that is easy---and quite comical, too-when it is once understood, The catching of a mon- key is a 'good illustration of the folly of strong drink, the mockery oi the appetite = for rum. Drunken monkeys? That is it, my boy, said the African hunter, smiling. We are on a tour for monkeys, let us say ; the rst thing is to find their haunts. That is easy enough, for the brats ar_e chattering in the tree-tops day and night. Then, the locality decided upon, ctr we go early some morning ; soon the monkeys are astir; each of my twenty native servants carrying a small pail lled with cheap ship rum, sweetened with sugar cane. The pails of rum are buried at the bases of the various monkey trees, leaving only the outer rim of the vessels exposed. Soon there is a noise in the treetops`, tell- ing us that the monkeys have sniffed, afar, their tripple. Cautiously the beasts come out of their places, and soon are drinking rum` like old topers. The usual rsult-- dead drunk--fo1lows in, say ve minutes. t Then we creep from our hiding and seize the pray that has come to us by the use of rum. It never fails. In my time I have caught many hundred monkeys in this fashion. an .0 1 Luvlllvus To catch a boa constrictor, continued the man from the dark continent, is a diicult and dangerous task. Briey, it is accomplished by means of alabyrimhian tangle, say embracing sixty square feet of ground." The labyrinth is-made` by joining together, end on end, pieces of matting. This web is eight feet high, usually, and placed so that the opposing walls will be two feet apart. All sorts of criss`-cross and diverging combinations are made with - the matting--it is supported here and there by stakes-making when it is set a geome- trical puzzle that might well challenge the ingenuityrof man. The trap is baited` with a live pig, which is placed in a pen in the center 0 the labyrinth. By and by along comes the boa constrictor. It ' is easy enough to get in ; he scents the prey, he is very hungry; the pig is devoured --and here the boa comes to grief. For hours he strives to release himself from` the `tortuous pas- sages which rise about "him, but by and by he grows tired and stretches himself out `for a na . Then is our time. We open the labyrint and catch hing. II `|`I ,,l__ 1_a.bynnt.n anu cancn mug." It is a clever scheme, Mr. Healey. But how about the bigger game ? _-, , J II - 77-- .-r-- -.v vv --v-- ---v _..a__ :7- To snare the lion,, pursued Mr. Hea- ley, the natives have recourse to a net- work of green bamboo. This is woven to- gether till the whole fabric cover: seventy- iive square feet. The- corners are secured by pins. It is loose in the middle. A live goat is secured under the net. The lion crawls under the net to devour the goat ; the men rush out from their places of concealment; the lion starts to turn, twist d ght. but he hasu t room. He thrashes` mid, and the sight of his strug- gles is appalling, but he only enmeshes himself still more hopelessly in the treach- erous coils of the green and willowy bam- L..- LIUW Uuluca van: nu-aucov l.:uuv-u-av nu.- must be secured alive. One misstep, one careless move on the part of the mjn, and every. lite is put in . jeopardy ; indeed. deaths at the lion s claws, under these cir- cumstances, are not infrequent. The green netting is released from. two of its corners and the matting securely wound about the lion s body; in other words, the lion is sim- ply wrapped in the meshes of the bamboo matting. It is utterly impossible to ex- plain how it is done ; and, believe me, sir, added the intrepid hunter, looking about him with the air of one whom the varied dangers of the plains and jungle had made not iusensible to a worthy foe, it is a sit- } nation to try the stoutest heart. The hoarse M cries of the ensnared lion and the imminent possibility that he will break his snare are `enoughto make any man quail. I value my life as cheaply as` does `anyone, yet I sb.y_that a lion s roar will make me trem- blelike a child. ' ' .Dangers and escapes?. Well, yes ; a few-and Mr. Healey smiled. I was bit- ten` by a boa-constrictor only a few months ago. The wound is stillpsore. Here it 18. on my left hand. V The hand revealed an `ugly gash, as though-made by a buzz saw. ' a .21 1 1 AI__A -..-I... L... A man, won!-. I111 I110. mougn muuu u; n Uunu "W, I had that snake in a pen, went on the huiiter, and I was about to move him from om! place to another, when snap! aha pondex-o\_1a.jaws shut upon me ! A It was .a.....nu Awful. I 'l`heanain-`oh ! I cannot do- ponderoue . Jaws enut upon mu 3 All was simloy awful. . The pain--oh de- acri it. On another occasion, come years ago, I was bitten by a leo rd. The wound laid me up for weeks. he leopard was crouch in the limb of a tree. I shot at a. wildcat; the noise startled the leopard, which at once sprang wildly into the air and,-ae it chanced, directly at my feet. In- etuutl the ferocious beast. turned and at- tack me. It was life against life. In all my many varied experiences in the jungle, his in the only time I ever really gave up my chance of eeeingihome or friends-again. Luckily for me niyrtrained black boy, 00- .Oo-Ki,: who came smith...-.me AfI',0.m Sierra .. Leone, eudwho not has ~'beeide:!ne -.in. the:.Gongo ,b,ue.h,heard in `aria `and came tony r,eecue.. l The woun Zin'eu.leiiIiu:.tioie. but: thejoaarl I fthall parry uith-meto;my;aI!A.V9-9 l" -' W Henley l_n'e*brought" ith-hin'ejon gm. ., ftrip~a~ tiillni uid torlook mp_telocely;_ i ` liEe*thi"_moue`:(Jeutrc perk 3-5?Mn;,~i(1rp,u:.,-. ` lay," an late `dened. _Theu moliiej `hip been dubbed . Crowley : Boy, . ` Ur Now comes the hardest psrt--the `lion ..--L L. .....-...-...A nliun (`run |nnaf.nn nnn A recent transaction enables us to offer our customers some lines of goods, which for good value is away ahead of anything yet shown, even by ourselves, and as our readers lknow We have always had the well earned reputation of and in fact, everything in our lineat even less than city prices. Special lines in Prints, Dress Goods, Sateens, Gloves, Hosiery, Parasols, Shirtings, Tweeds, Cottons, Boys and Mens Ready Made Clothing, Lace Curtains, Carpets and Oil Cloths ` rnnmev enavuu. lwe Want to be rid of him. We Ofthv unsuccessful candidates in Eng- land Mr. (Joi-rie Grant will be best remem- bered forthe Quixotic daring of his at- tacks. He had the teinerity to aeeail the seat of Lord Randolph Churchill when--aI Sir Wihrid Lawson expressed it-.--that fa- moua iumier of the fourth party was mem- berfor \\'oo(lc0ck.V Though he got well beaten, M r. lrant had better luck in the pocket-borough of the Marlborough: than might have been expected. But his latelt onslaught on West Birmingham can only be regarded as a forlorn hope, seeing that he was defeated by no fewer than 4-418 votes. lie is youngenough, however, to try again, and with more judgment in the selec- tion of it constituency may ultimately l acliiove the object of his ambition. Ml`. Grant, who was at one time on the Parlia- mentary stuff of The Daily News, is a barrister by profession; but in addition to his legal practice he ii still connected with a journal that deals with the sale or letting of land.