Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 13 Oct 1887, p. 7

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 '•"n'^¥«*?«p^T' â- R^^S^iagPPflPSWP^^s-I^^Bj^fM^lli^ ^^"^^fWIWW' wm^ on 'er. aething to tett^, banks of fiei\^ own with\;jj *^ beautiful, if ,P^- and an op^nTX'S please. I want to K. «Jlyou. This" fc ,? \^?^"nd aCt^ ching her «oft "heS ell me your news " m Lily and she say. enemy, whom we fci, ers of the Indian tert ad she turned her faS and began to sob like iigh. half of surprise, ef and. with his arnl V P««'^ap«:r and ding-" Suicide of an 'yes at once, im. Bah, chUdâ€" why he ex-trooper a little read the paragraph irn, but for Heaven's answered. "He is y sin, granted time to en you " " he said, kissing her. get rich enough, we -fety and see Lily and •led house by the Nore " writing." Do you know, Giynn, says about her happy iierâ€" for I have sinned "'id you and found you Ah, well, we both OTHiNO Like L.jvB^n End.] s;e of Childhood, to-day, those fierce nst have delighted in d enemies. Thus dur- ission was unkD n, e been lately acq dd races. Indeed, even ivated a people as the almost unknown until times â€" say fifteen n proof of which may less fondness for the rena. 7 appeared late in the ind, in view of i;V â- ) law ivhich carries us along s have trod, how can be anything else but judicious to go, in try- •al course of a child's posing upon him ideas be will not share until ion is inviting, but we tion at present, content- iserving that because a iction at giving pain to mly lacerates the feel- uirrels, merely to g'»e glected pets, is no rea- I to grow up a monster will further venture to of the immorality of nsequenoe of their de- of which follows the friend, " A good boy idKina Van Zandt na Van Zandt tells a S3 Van Zandt's father's in Philadelphia the igo. All that remain- luence were five png f Nina, and, as she give them up, the er's assets had omitted iule of his eflfects. ully attached to the tsed and she felt more poverty, her aflfection One day the favorite Mlllgent search, o£Fei« sing were all ineffec- nimal to its bereaved ndt wrote a letter to recounting her sorrow 1 of her greatest pet hs then editor of the etter, and wrote M vhich he made a good ung girl's love for the al gave the incident tit lead to the disco- )f tne dog. Miss Van il that she went m editor, and that t»»» letween the^ doomed man who is destined /htels in Motion- ography has just 1 W. Gardner to denwo- 3of the fact that tM ielofa vehicle in mo- lickly than its Iff** las taken an omnino* in this photogrtffit jfthespokea »niB»«j ground are not pj" by the motion, tm- jkes show sn «««** to about lOAeff^ most succeerfolly e» he wheel it reP^jST InstantMieons pnjT^ is going on, will w^ to conquer. ??T; -crowded atfett entlenutn on V*^" e in8ide)-"C« «• ire?" Chora" «**^ dy; two of I 2;i 1 fofl Late in the Day. TV many weeks s«o there residecl ^ot 80 very ^^^^j.jj of Camford a aome- !»«"« '"Iroff -minded individual named narro*-' Jo*p'i^',f^a3 not an inappropriate one ;or sever*! '^^^'^^ much addicted to the ' I"" renins at people indeed, he gener- i»W"'TS-g^^erally. didlsay? Ay." »lly with his mouth pretty wide open. s!**^' 'Jnnle called him the fly-catcher, Soffl* P*"" s uiifortanate habit. ' j^.aaje "' '" ,^,y means an intelligent 2'**,^?-on this Joseph Gaper; on the looking Pf- ^^^ ^^gut as stupid-looking an contra^y^ "^j one is likely to meet with in a ^jy's march ^^j^^^.^^ ^^^ him, he had not ForMB*- J^J notion that he was rather a tie mo3t r .^^ ^^^^ otherwise. On the con- P" t° 'ousiJere-i himself a very charm- triry- n^ \^, intelligent, and handsome V-^i^no^^' ^-^^ ?° many instances i,!!tap:ioricaliy, but m reality, throw "c i'lv'i ihe opiriioa Joseph Gaper held â-  If ' reff-i-rded his influence with the s'glliSveJ the occupation of florist, and 1 .? h^me with his father, a highly re- fX\e i-nd unassuming old man, who had eSfished" the basines* in which hU son "°t! Jr/ery amusing to see the self-satisfi- ed, oseph Gaper make his way through the Sord streets, dressed all in his best, and rith the air ot one who bebeved the whole nljce belonged to him. i t, Poor fellow A good many people laugh- ed in their sleeves at him, but he, m his pro- ioand ignorance, felt convinced one and all jiaured and envied him. Vow as ia very natural m the spring- ri^e of manhood, he had serious thoughts of finding out some gentle creature who wonld suit his taste when he should^ feel iaJned to " settle down and get married," is'the saying goes. 0: course he knew a good many young ladies of his own class of life though prob- laly if you had dared to suggest that a ..opf irl was his equal, he would have been i^hly indignant. However, we will as- camei and if we are wrong he must, forgive a, that they were his equals. But he turn- 'ap his nose at the mere notion of marry- ing anyone in that positionâ€" a well-to-do tradesman's daughter was the lowest degree •0 which he ciuld dream of stooping. There happened to stand, not very far irom his father's premises, a tavern, bearing ;he name of The Sceptre. Now The Sceptre was. without any ex- ception, the best conducted house of the kind that ever was seen. â-  Tiie landl r 1, a hearty, genial-faced John Ball, conducted his business in the most exemplary manner possible. So druukenness or rioting was permit- ted at The Sceptre. The landlady, a delicate, lady-like looking person, was universally respected. The name of the worthy couple was Biltil. They were blessed with an only child â€" a daughter. At the period of our story she was two and iientj' years of age. Now Mi-iS Bi^fil was a remarkably hand- some looking ynung lady. We call her a lidy advisedly, and not in the general sense of the word, which now is applied to every tiling feminine in human sliape under the sin. She had heen educated at excellent schools, ad educated thoroughly. This and the fact oilier possessing a natural refinement of mind, emanating most probably from her seade mother, rendered her a most desiia ble wife for any man who should have the jcod fortune to win her. hi spite of the respectability of The Scep- tre, the life she was compelled to lead as Wsiaid was not, or at any rate could not oe acceptable to one possessing her tastes. ^he, however, made the b^st of it, stnd as ier chief delight was in rendering her par- ents happy, no one ever heard her grumble 1" kr lot. It will easily be understood in what high respect Miss'Billil was held. From the I«orest frequenters of the house to the wealthiest, from the huniblest to the best Mrn, she was respected and liked by them It was currently believed that the parents »ere very wall to do. They deserved to be Mia doubtless they were. The natural in- ierence drawn was, that Miss Bilfil, being ffi only child, would one day be extremely w*ll off, and consequently, if only in a pwaiiiaryway, she would prove an excellent atcn. Bat Miss Bilfil was not the kind of young «y to throw herself away upon the first â„¢" who had the impertinence to flatter ner. •â- f knew how to put a man in his right Plwe as well as any one. Of course there were many who oglea her, lu J*T â„¢*g»riative gentlemen who be- Z\y y ""'y "^^^ *8^ Ijer to marry, ""a She would consentâ€" conceited donkeys ^oDgst those who frequented The g2 u*^ "^^ ^^'^° of o""" st^ory* Joseph .per* He oAmo vt^-^, ^t^ â€" i .j «.»«, ireti KiTrk^^" *as courteous and polite to »," "â„¢' as she was towards all who loni came very often and gaped very "gitpretty Miss Bilfil. •*8S Bilfil was Pn„rf^, ^liucted themselv more. es properly, but nothing ^t'!^^"" however, held the' same Pwon about Miss Bilfil as he held about iidWf^°"°.8^*^i«« of his acquaintance, ^^'sltconvmced he had only to say, " Be tionai. ^°°^" J""^P *o^â„¢ ^»s op®"" "J* *?J8^t the matter- over aerioudy. ;: •owdproye a good mateh. Old Bilfil 1â€" a good deal of his child, though much aflection towurd her his money is sure to come to ..""â- "t show mnnl, ««•._* 1^% â- ""g^v^k" '^^ I might do worse a l^kspCo^ u®* i»ice girl, educated well, ^esortJ^.' "^^ all that sort of thine. W t 8^1 1 shouldn't feel ashamed of, "'« the tlL?!???®^*!' *° ^o*** °»y"" tad such. L^fof^ity of market-gardenera "*e- 1 think I shall have to nuurry W." ^J^toCH^h "y^*^ "f reasoning in which •^3^- Formanyevening«he ?»WfonKriy Ht The Sceptre, and "Did hT^ *Â¥^""" at Miss AlfiL ^^^ love her ' perhaps the readet ^d fi ga^^on how could such a poor, C^ thing love anyone beyond « one night, after having in- 'can J *â- - Ir-»B»rty let mvwlf in 2.??**^±f i^ 8.,io«SiU.tei; «4lCfcmod muidtoaecMelMr without fartW d^y. SheV» rtraight girl. I'm •M^ Md a »he once Bid. • Yea • to afeUow â-  •ha d never draw back, even thongh ahe met aomwne die liked better but that would never be if I once aaked her." With theae reflections the conceited Gaper retired to rest, Uttle dreaming how the morrow would vary the weak current of huporpose. Itcame about in this. He was introduc- ed to a rich bnUder'a daughter, whose parents were old friends of his father's. The gentle Joseph thought he had struck lie, ' as the Americans say, with a vengeance. What could he do better than find out everything possible about this new aoqnain tance, who probably was heiresa to «' of goli." ' Visa Bilfil," he said to himself, '"*â€" she's a certainty at any given mo- ment. If Miss Clarke, the buDder's daugh- ter, hasn't the prospects leport declareth, I can very easily renew my attentions at The Saeptre." Consequently Joseph Gaper was not seen so regularly at The Sceptre Tavern as usual. He appeared every now and again, how- ever, and gaped for an hour or so in his usuil idiotic manner, and then letired. "She's all right," he murmured to him- self on his way home " smiles and chats as pleasant as ever" (Joseph's grammar was shaky at times) " and will wait until I speak, as long as I leave her a shadow of hope." Miss Clarke, the builder's daughter, grew really fond of Mr. Gaper. Poor pirl, she was not gifted with too much intellect, which no doubt accounts for her extraordi- nary taste. The flycatcher had captivated her somehow or other. It took him a long time to discover " how she really stood," as he called it and she being a simple kind of girl and, most fatal thing of all against a silent tongue and a wise head, in love, gave him all the inform- ation that lay in her power. This satisfied him, and he proposed. On a lovely starlit night he made his of- fer, and report has it that after he had taken this stupendous step, he did not close his mouth for four-and- twenty consecutive hours. On the day that followed this proposal he learnt, to his great consternation, that Miss Clarke's father had lost a very large amount of money in a bank-failure, and was consequently reduced to comparative po- verty. Now, note the course that this narrow- minded florist took. Remember, he had plenty of money, and could well iFord to marry a woman without a sixpence. He took auiother stroll beneath the starlit sky with Miss Clarke, and instead of sym- pathising with her in her father's great loss, which of course meant ruin to her as well as to him, he reviled her for having misled him. " You misrepresented ' things to me shameful," said Joseph, gaping more than ever with real and assumed anger, "You've treated me cruel. I wouldn't a minded if you'd spoke straight-forward for I ain't a pauper, whatever other folks may be." Poor Miss Clarke cried very much, and assured him she had no idea of the evil that was pending and which had so sudden- ly fallen upon her poor father. " Had no idea " exclaimed the flycatcher scornfully " Of course not no one never has no idea of anything which is likely to upset their apple-carts " (this was rather o shoppy expression) " with them as suits them," which was the flycatehers muddled way of endeavouring to state that people never know of anything that is not likely to suit them. It was useless for poor Miss Clarke to plead, let her do so never so wisely, Joseph Gaper had made up his mind to pick a quarrel with and get rid of her. Having reviled her for half an hour, and giving her plainly to understand that he was at an end between them, he left, and repaired to The Sceptre. " Ha ' he exclaimed mentally, and his mouth stood wider open than ever with ad- mirationâ€"" Ha that's the girl for my mo- ney." He stood gaping at Miss Bilfil, as though he really did feel a little bit in love for once in his life. Probably it was a kmd of reac- tion after his baseness and cruelty towards the builder's daughter. Miss Bilfil was talking to a dark and re- markably handsome gentlemanly-looking man when the flycateher entered. He had seen this dark personage there a good many times during the last eighteen months. He had asked who he was, and had been m- tormed that he was a gentleman of excellent family, holding a good berth in a govern- ment ofiice. Although he always made way for the florist when he came in, and never endeavoured to monopolise the conversation with Miss Bilfil, an endeavour Joseph Ga- per always made, the flycateher was not wise enough to learn by example--mdeed, he didn't like the dark man, probably for the simple reason that the dark man was a ^^Tharnrght, as usual, the dark gentleman vei^ soon retired after Joseph Gaper's a^- jwaiance, and left him master of the posi- tion. " Those chaps in government offices ain t much to do, I should thmk," said the fly- cateher, with a snter. "Have not they " answered Miss BilfaU handing him his grog. r-ner " Lazy snobs as a rul*," said Mr. Graper. " There are exceptions in every raid, re- plied Miss Bilfil cDmplacently. Now Miss BUfil took these two last re markT aimed against the man who had just ?^tS.^th «ich calm indifference, that it SSdened Joseph Gaper's heart beyond °1?H^e'd oared a straw about him she'd flashed through Mr. Gaper » "" «^*j£" Si mi^t least have a f r«i^ f eetog "'S;* KurSi. « a'^STof feeler, and he was rejoiced wiA the re«Ut. "Thfur^hScedto 1«. ve^ ^^'^^ soon Mr. witbMif ever,"ht ..â- â€ž.„^^ he said to hinu^ ^^ aedJ^ow2«5." codedtwifederiHrtfB â- i^d •* Yes " to He waa convinced in "T ;;^-;C- -aoM a»y her.XJiaTa P tile qoeation, and go and many oAdaa. Iaiv«it«iakttieh» thing any \aunt» Then addreasiog Miaa^^l. he â-¼arypartiealar « my I've had mind for a long ifh: " Indeed r said Miss Bilfil with her plea- sant nnile. " Very parttcolar." said Mr. Gaper. ' I hoM it ia v«y pleasant atao," replied " Oh, very, very I Hie very pleasantest thmg I ever had on my mind 1" cried the flycatcher.. Miss Biltil smiled, and sarveyed him with a kind ci pity, which he mistook for admir- ation. " Shall I tell you what it is " s id the flycateher, whose voice had now sunk almost to a whisper. " If you please," answered Miss Bilfil. " I've made up my mind to ask you to marry me, dearest one I My 'and wad 'art are yours 1" He stretehed out his palm as he spoke and bent forwards over the bar. Mis Bilfil drew back; and for a moment a looR of anger drossed bar face but with ad- miral good sense she suppressed it. "You are talkin? nonsense," she said with a laugh. " I swear I'm not " cried Loseph Gaper. " Then if you are serious, Mr. Gaper, an- swered Miss Bilfil with admirable dienity, " I must inform you that I am already en- gaged, the honor of your offer has come too late in the d)y." An amused smile came into her handsome face as she said the last words. The flycateher's jaw dropped his mouth stood wider open than ever. He drank up his grog at last, and went his way a wiser and a sadder man, having lost the woman who could have made him happy, and been thoroughly snubbed by the one he was con- ceited enough to think was dying for him. Miss Bilfil is shortly to be married to ^r. Reginald Chambers, and may all happiness and all possible blessings attend her. hia own mind that he OT]T OF ITS DEBIT. The New Brunswick Meteor as Seen TTom Boston. The fall of the great meteor in New'Brun^ wick has excited much interest at the Har- vard Observatory. One of Prof. Pickering's assistante says that he saw plainly the flash of the aerolite. " I was just leaving home," said he, "and looked up at the sky, when immediately I saw something which I thought at first was a flash of lightning. I looKed more closely then, and found that there was a difiused light, like lightning behind clouds. It was a yellowish-white color. "The duration was somewhat greater than that ot a lightning flash. 1 came up here and reported the matter, and found that one of the other aussistants had just came in, who was then telling of the very same phenomenon. I know now that it must have been the New Brunswick meteor that I saw." "The fall of meteors," continued the Professor, " is by no means so uncommon as you might sup- pose, although, of course, we seldom hear of such a large one as that which fell Thursday night. There is a curious coincidence in the estimate of the size of that one and one which the ancient writer, Pliny, mentions as having been found in the Thrace 500 years before the Christian era. The correspondent of A. D. 1881 says the meteor was " larger than a box car." The historian of B. C. 467 states that the one he saw "had the size of a wagon." Since Pliny's time, however, there has been a long record of aerolites, which /are more exactly described, and no museum is so poor that it does not exhibit one or more specimens of these visitors from unknown space. About the oldest known specimen is one weighine 260 pounds, which fell in Al- sace in 1492. it is still preserved in the Church at Ensisheinn. The largest masses on record were found about seventeen years ago on the west coast of Greenland by the Swedish Arctic Expedition. There is now in the collection of the Royal Academy of Stockholm, one of them which weighs twenty- five tons and the Museum of Copenhagen has another weighing ten tons. In the British Museum is one weighing five tons, and in the museum at St. Petersburg one of 1635 pounds. The Smithsonian Institute at Washington has a very remarkable specimen discovered in Mexico in 1700, which, accord- ing to an Indian tradition, fell 200 years be- fore that, during a shower of stones. Its weight is 1400 pounds. There are lOO speci- mens in Yale College Museum, one weighing 16^5 pounds. Daring the present century aerolites have been carefully studied and analyzed, and, indeed, aside from rhe general outside ap- pearance, by which they are readily re- cognized by an expert, a chemical analysis is the one sure test by which they can be distinguished in doubtful cases. In many cases they are largely composed of iron, and from one which fell in Mexico a sword-blade was made, which was once in the possession of Gen. Old, of the United States army. The origin of those mysterious visitors has been widely discussed, but never thcrough- ly explained. Of the -arious theories there are two which attract the most belief. One is that space is filled with floating masses, and that our aerolites are that portion of them that comes ^within the sphere of the earth's attraction. The other is that they are projected from the sun and other planets, by the inconceivably tremendous forces at work there. It U strange that in the fall of so many large masses, witn snch treinend- ons force, there has nevrar been sny weU au- thenticated case of loss of life. The chances are good, however, that one of them wiU strike a city some day." Captains of ocean steamers arriving in Boston say they saw the f alUng meteor while far out at sea. To GnxB a Clnii. There ia no lack of so-called cures for the common rilment known aa oonia. Ihe vege- table, animal, and mineral fangdoma have been ransacked for cures. It is a rimple matter to remove corns withoat p^n. for if ^fcTdoiie. Get, "Pntnam'" aa no otbar. gtniMerâ€" Tramp, madam t llnnoj ^i^ rm jwjgrtttog home from a â€"«-«â€"â€"«* iehit mAn ani yoiwill have tedops t ve yum ae H af a single comtMct mt^ MUtoaiy, yna wiQ wijot Itf* mora dian era*.' Sov e^A yon aeatepaih this resnltl. Kaaily eatdowa your doctor'a l^Ua. When yiM Majpoar appetlta, and beoome biUona aad'oâ€" Mp ated, and tl»ei«iara low-^iiited. don't mak off to the busily phyaioian for a preaniptioB. or, on tite otbn-|iaad, wait antiLyoB.«r« siok abed before doing any- tfaiagat all; bat just go to the dranist'a and fer tw«ity-five oenta get a ao^^ of Da. Pioroa'a Pleaaant Piugative BsUets. Tako them aa directed, usd oar word for it, yoor nnpleasant symptoms, will disappear as if by magic, yon wUl have no big doctor's bill to pay, and everybody interested (ex- cept the doctor), will feel happy. The Langtry cloak was first brought oat at Altman's. She Cbulda't ITaderstand It. " What in the world has happened to you since the laat time I saw you " asked one lady of another when they met on the street the other day "I can't understand it. Then you were pale, haggard and low- spirited, and I remember you said that you hardly cared whether you lived or died. To-day you look ever so much younger, and it is very evident from your beaming face that your low spirits have taken flight." " Yes. indeed," was the reply " and shall I tell you what drove them away It waa Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. I was si martyr to functional derangement until I began takine the ' Prescription.' Now I am as well as I ever was in my life. No woman who suffers as I did, ought to let an hour pass before procuring this won- derful remedy. " Mrs. Mackay has been persuaded by Lady Burdett-Coutts to join the latter in a plan for the assistance of London's starving poor. A Prize of $100,00a is a good thing to get, and the man who wins it by superior skill, or by an unexpect- ed turn of Fortune's wheel," is to be con- gratulated. But he who escapes from the clutches of that dread monster Consump- tion, and wins back health and happiness, is far more fortunate. The chances of win- ning SIOO.OOO are small, but every consump- tir e may be absolu'.ely sure of recovery, if he takes Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis- covery in time. For all scrofulous diseases (consumption is one of them), it is an un- failing remedy. All dniggists. The women of the Presbyterian church of this country have raised during, the past sixteen years about $2,150,000 for missions. Cofi No more. Watson's cough drops are the best in the world for the throat and chest, for the voice unequalled. See that the letters R. T. W. are stamped on each drop. One swallow d9es not make a summer, but several swallows may make a fall. The Sportins Record, In Book form, contains a correct recopl he Fast- KST Time and best performances in all Departhbnts OF Sport, Aquatio and Athletic performances. Bil- liards, Racing and Trottiug records, Ba3tball,Cricket, Lacrosse,' etc. P.-ice 6c. Stamps taken. Address all orders to THE RECORD, 60 Front East, Toronto Canada. Room No. 15. " All But" is the title of a story by Rose Terry Cooke. Probably the history of a billy goat. free Free Free A Book of Instruction and Price List of Dyeing and Cleaning to be had gratis by calling at any of our offices, or by post by sending your address to R Parker Co., Dyers and Cleaners, 759 to 763 Yonge St., Toronto. Branch Offices 4 John St. .N., Hamilton 100 Colborne St., Brantford. Has anybody ever alluded to the fact that painting the town red is a cardinal sin TOIJIVG HEN suffering from the effects o early evil habits, the result of ignorance and f oUy, who find themselves weak, nervous and exhausted, also Hid- DliB-AGBD and Old Mbn who are broken-down from the effects o abuse or over-work, and in advanced life feel tne consequences of youthful excess, send tor and RBAD M. V. Lubon's Treatise on Diseases of Men, The boox will be sent sealed to any address on receipt of two 3c. stamps. Address M. V. Lubon, 17 Welling- ton St E. Toronto, Ont. In a midnight fight between two gentle- men cats there is no tom-foolery. Whenever jour Stomacdi or Bowels get out of or der, causing Biliousness. Dyspepsia, or Indigestion and their attendant evils, bJce at once a dose of Dr. Carson's Stomach Bitters. Best f«nUy medicine. All Dnnrgista. 50 cents. " Gkod gracious " exclaimed a lady visi- tor to the sporting editor's room, as, with terror in her eyes, she made a dart for the door " is there murder going on outside " "Becalm, madam," said the sporting editor with a gentle smile, " it is nothing. It is only the religious editor swearing over his proofs." Catarrh* Catarrhal DeatnMS and Hay FeTer. Snfterers are not genera ly aware that these Olieasee SM oontagious, or that they are due to the presenoe of livinfc parasites in the lining membrane of the nose and eostaohian tabes Mlorosaopio researoh, however, has proved this to be a fact, and the resolt Is that » dmple remedy has been formolated whereby oatarrh, oatairiial deeifnesi and hay fever are cured In from one to three simide appUcatioiis made at home. A pamidilet f^iitinTng ^fia new treatment is sent tree oo no^ M Btsnqp by A. H. Dixon 4 Son, 808 King Street west Toronto Canada Smoking destroys the memory, says a scientist, and the Statement finds strong corroboration in the fact that many people who smoke forget to buy their own cigars uid tobacco. ftopis iriM are subjeol to bad breath, foul ooatcd tongue, or any disorder of the Stomadi, ean at one e be relieved by using Dr. Canon's Stoiraolh Bltterr, Mm old and tried remedy. Ask tout Dnwgist. A. F. 366 tWTARHI YnERMARY COLLEGE. IteoHlo. rtes ar^-«oasMy«r seasioB aesstoa isni Mlh. â-  Odoiier, â-¼. 8.. nMonta. Appljrti Ike Priaoipd, POF Witn mt niMinHntiirliy tour aiSerent powdmâ€" bhie, wUUvTeBbw Mid tnS Frea^ liquid stamping tor pintih, fiuat add ailk, mlnntsly dceonb* ed in prtnt. all sentltv^^uil for 40 cent*. C. STUK lEANnEBOE.41xWM.,Tbrant6. Buiteiiok's .Patterns and Books lor October always on hand. w iOinDâ€" 6.000 AQENTSâ€" Ma'e and Femaleâ€" JjUfge pitiflts. C. W. DENNIS, Toronto. Q afryTC For Saleâ€" niostrative descriptive Cat rAICn 10 aloguefree. R. Chamberlin. Toronto ••» UTB A«Bm WAMTBD IN EVEB^ It Conn47 in Canada. Address, jfBBKIg C*., 87 Chnndi St, Taranta. Da.WH. AKa8n*N^ awMatolacist. tesdalty, £Bdn diseases, Serolula and audit, eases J^vie bIo«M. An oaooers oared that are oore- able, without the ose of the knife. Oflloe boors, tronr 9tolSaBi.andfroml:S0to4S0p.iii., Sabbaths ex OHHIbI.' S8 Dnndas Street Toronto. bo si Pfeft ACBt tor K. W. and W. i of N. E. So* JofSec.15, Tp. 12,Ito^2,B««t,S*0!«w. Smtmudpfgi also M J Sea 8. ^, 1, ligs WjWest, noamiit tZWper aen, near Cnrwd Ci^. Chirioe, oneaenmbercd. M Augusta Ave. Toroato. mLD,SS^ I a Boom XoahUai ooMPOBrnoN iou Wood, and otter ANOTHER MfELTY. .OoliMssfc Spriak. ler and Atomiatr. Alltherageinthenatss. Agmts wanted. Sanipla by mail 45 oenU. CLEVENT k Ca, Toronto. ME LONDON QUAItANTCK AND AGnOENT C8. (10: OF LONDON. EML Capital. £SOU,iO(i. Dominion Government Deposit, £56,00a Head Oflloe 73 King St East, Toronto. Gentlemen of influenoe wanted in unrepresented districts. A. T. MoOOBD, Resident Secretary tor the Dominion. Salt, airy FOB BUTTEE, ETC. "WYew Importations.â€" Higgins* Eureka, Washing. 1^ ton and Aahton Brands, in lar«e or small saoks. Also Bioe's Canadian Salt Write for prioee. JAMES PARK SON, Wholesale Produce Meroliants Toronto. SS^StM^Sril^thonasiikiiowl^ of gar* i^^UgSmSl Ma*eattli«iaanitsbnuHlMMBoadm|rat once toB. Oorrigaa^^vmilslor, ISI Tonga SL.ToraatD Cook's Gem BAKING POWDER Why do yon use those Expensive American and Canadian Baking Powdeit when you can get as good and whole ome at one half the price Prove it by buy- ing the Cook's Gem. Manufactured by ELLIS KEIEfHLEY. Toronto. DYEING AND OLEANINC. R. PARKER CO. Vforks and Head OIBces 759 TO 763 YONGE ST. f 209 Yonge Street, "» 393 Queen St Wtst, VTOBONTO. i. 225 Queen^St. East, J City ffices 100 Co bo-ne Street â- .. Branttord, Ont. 4 John Street. North Hamilton, Ont. BOOK AGENTS WANTED '0K "THE COTTAGE Physician," a complete domestic medical ency- clopedia. This errcat work is prepared to meet the wants of the common people, who have long felt the need ot a complete, comprehensive, reliable " doctor book" at a price within their reach no family medi- cal book has ever been written hy men more eminent in the profession than tbe authors of The Cottage Physician the treatment is not confined to one Ech:ol of medicine, as in similar books, but embraces the four principal treatments this contains 640 pages illustrated with nearly 200 engravings including nu- merous ftillpage colored plates terms liberal send forcirciUars. WiIjLIAH Brioos-, Publisher, Toronto. AGENTS WANTED-; WE WANT A «OOD Ke liable Mam In Every Town and Village In Canada, to sell our NEW BEAUTIFULLY DECORATED WINDOW BLINDS. Sell at Bight. Every house needs them. Cheap, Durable and Economical. No Washing or Ironing, and will last ten times as long as ordinary cotton blinds, nolo Township Kights. Our Agnt8 are making $3 to tjIS a day with Easy Work. Enquire early. Complete outfit, including Sample Shade?. Spring Roller. Stationery and all information, by express, 2iio. HIKSCHBEKG Jt CO., 41 King St East, Toronto. Allan Lino Aoyal Hall U jamsMps. Sailing during wlntsr from Port and every hunday and HaUf ax every Saturday to Liverpool, and in sam- mer from Quebec every Saturday to Liverpool, oalUng at Londonderry to land mails and passengeis toi Seotland and Ireland. Also from Baltimore via Hall. tax and St. John's N. F., to Liverpool fortnightly dol- ing summer months. The steamers ot the Ola^pnr lines sail during winter to and from Halifax, Portuuid Boston and Philadelphia and during summer betwsaa Glasgow and Montreal, weekly, Qla^;ow and Boston ' weekly;. and Glasgow and Philadelphia, tortnlghtbr For Freight, passage, or other information applyis .4 Schumacher ft Ck., Baltimore ;S. Ounard ft Oa, Halifax Shea ft Co., St John's N. F., Wm. Xhomsoa ft Co., St John N. B. Allan ft Co., Ohlosgo Lots A Alden, Mew York H. Bourlier, Toronto Allans Baa ft Co., Quebec ;Wm. BrooUe, Philadelphia; H. A. Allan Portland Boston Hontreal FOR ONE CENT 1,M0 Miles of new Line of Btdlway built this season. Land all for settlement. Unsurpasiied fcr grain or stock farms. 480 acres free. To learn how to get it. Bind your address on postal card. J. M. HVCKINS, ^06 King St W., Toronto. THE ALBANY STEAM TRAP CO.'S SPECIAL BUCKET RETURN TRAP. artbe Celebrated Han. oock Inspirator. VOresliam'sAutomatio Be-starting Injector. larUorrison'sAutomatlo Sigbt Feed Lubricator. I^Engineen' ft Plumb- ers' Snpidies of every description. Send tor eircnlan. 44MB8 â- OKKIgOir, 7ift 77 Adelaide St W., TOBONTO t^ have decided in tnturs to put Dr. Jui^s Medicine in a brown Jug, Instead ot flam boWe as heretofore The Jogs that we will use for this pnrpose are nuule of the flnestunportedBook. Ingham, of a mottled brown CMOur, with " Dr. Jug's Medicine tor Longs, Liver and Blood" in raised let- ters oa tbe side. Our raasetis tor making this change are 1stâ€" Its won- dcrfal curative qualitiss wUl be better preserved by ths medicine being kqA •Btirelyinthedaric Sndâ€" As the lug win be register- ed it vllTbe impossible to eonntarfeit It Srdâ€" The name " Dr. 9i^s Msdi- rACSIMILE cine" wiU be more easily or A *ua or Da. Jue-a remembered by assooia •SEOiciNK. tlon. 4tfaâ€" Onr friends wiUbsabl o recognise st'OBoalhBt they are retting the gennii. article, aa there is no other m ed U d n e pn« up a Jug. DK JU0 MEOICIHE OQ.. Toronto and Staatloid. GONsynrami SRBidhOffio».9r YaQgt8k,TMli "»-fi^ t; *!! r* i. i '-x^'-! â-  J"V'

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