_ ...--..y.- w--- -9-- .- .-.... _---~-.-, When-l was first at "Vienna; some? years aqvv. I remember; that the favorite and - <*.ons'ant playmate of the young; -Archdu_r'.lie'ss, Valerie, daughter of the` Emperor. was a. young; negro n:imed' Mahmored. who had been `employed in the`E;,r5ptian department of the Inter- 'naiiunal Expusnion of 1873," wVI_Iei-'e_`het had taken the fancy of t_ e Em";ii'ess to such a degree that she attached him to her household. Notwithstanding his color and the iufe1io1'i1y of his'1'auk, he was treaited with a greatercondescension and fzuniliurity and ndmixt. d In much more intimacy, not only hy the imperial ` cliildru-n. hu. :.lso by the`En.pre-s:?~`, than 1 ifho Mr" "-"no one-if '11:` most iI"`S!'30'.IS' I nu-.4 : 3 Se AListro-Hungarian obi it)`. A: Li.~..;..,.uI havv he-vn |.)l't'.~':`._.i w..en lhevK1ug sulemnly uud in the presence of luiswholo cnu1'tin\'(_2i~`tod three hill- hlooded 1:e;.;roes from the coast of Africa with_the dignity of lsni;:;1nhom1 of the OrderoI'Ch1'ist, and one of the m~'inci- _ pal porsonuges of the kin,-.doxu \v.t.s an `aged negress who haul bc-en with the Queen ever si_nce lu-r marriage. und who was chief of Her I\IaJesty s attendants and maids. nu.- _--.._, _r- I _. ,. .- ___. 4. rl,,_,_, ._J* THE ADVANCE Day Boolis, Cash Books V BARBIE BWK BINIJEM PURE AND RICH IN TONE rnrrnn Arr: \ rr JAMESARNULD, Barrie, Representative for this District. T "NIB.-V-We have a few second hand Organs and Meilslsons at very low forcash customers. - ; V A.q-g--\- _.A.. - _ ____-..___ _- -. `BAR IR6N.H0oP1RoN.BAND IRON, SPRIN-GSTEEL, cmsr STEEL, SLEIGH-SHOE STEEL, V HORSE SHOES. HORSE NAILS.` BOB RUN NERS. SLEIGH RUNNER/S. , SHAFTS, EUBS. SPOKES, mus, ' . MILL SUPPLIES , `PA-1`. STOVE PIPES. Bell Pianos! AGET8%s::%Ft3I: THE 9}. H"6iiin%n -:- FURNACE Shelfand Heavy Hardware, McALL1s'rnn, swan? & C0 S. THE NEGRO IN EUROPE. A fact Advertisers should not. THEBELLUBGANAND PIANO 80., no. Minute Books TORONTO WAREROOMS, A. SDUTT, Bookseller, Barrie. Establishd 1864 Capital invested over One Mi]li-on dollars. T Head Oice and Factories, Guelph Ont. ROBERT cmsrps, PROPRIETOR. Barrie. Ledgers No. 5 Dunlap Street, Top Floor. You May Hit the Line. uoull 01;! , uny- ....-. SEND7 FOR PARTICULARS----- ILL -55` -L \lJ-V ' THOROUGTI IN DETAIL OF` WORKMANSHIP , - V ELEGANT IN DESIGN AND :=m.~H Remember that besides being the best newspaper in the northern" district, Goes into more homes, and %consequently is read bymore people than any other journal. Bell llrgans! A BUILDERS HARDWARE. READY MIXED PAINTS. DRY COLORS, `GLASS. PUTTY. . BOILED AND RAW OIL, v _ AXES. AXE HANDLES. X CUT" SAWS, LAMPS, LAMP CHIMNEYS. 107 YONGE ST-. Novrzmmn 30, 1...... , Periodicals Pamphlets Sample Cases &c., &c., &c. Law Rep0rts_ 0, 1893. `Magazines ` Music gures ` . T_'` `V . 1 Sncoeu. Attending the Late ,Lura non; consnelws Investment. M I .. Few acts of 11:9, late Lord B.-:aco :x.s\ eId, T says The vBirmingh:un:-D.Hy 1. -"St, 'I`..uunruv\"-at-U Iranian: t\`IO:f:lII.!r|`I of tin.` .lin'In' CKI III UlAC- UI(`.L'Ll\Jl.L3 llt v\J`JlIDU_I|I'IIal\'I|Al.I usage felt bound, ' on .'priiic-i_..l.-, A L lirotest, :I;`:1ll]Sf" t-xis"- new a.ll'.s'2vt between: lllini-ters and fit` b`.-.31..-`-.' Exchange and the L`li1`)l( )`.' ;i.-.x British tux'=a_ve:'s money furt =r-p-ir- c:'.-use ox` .=sna;r.-s in at f`|'ei_.-;n (' im 'H"l`l'..n under. ilgiru: a id the lac. in-at tn.;. in . vestiiieiit Wctd'expi`es.-il__v jpdstiiim-1 0. tr- plea o. 1-oliticaieV.ids" was ua.'}ii_\j ca,l-.i- V lated. to `slieuce vouje.:t.`.>._xs. .34.-.;_.. - h`Ci`~\'evei', .N':lllCl::".~' at great- in any .i'.' ' gn laritie;, and r. ere loin he no (1 2'. t-. .. either-as to. lie-'1al'l(`l:ll or l.l(3.r1')()ll_ll(.`il.l" nllcvesa of tho Sac-z pure iase. 'l` ~r.- sh are , which were purchased in 1617) lo: a _:H` millions are eslllIllil5,t`l_l ii) the name `inn. of the Excnequerto be ..om \\ ul'I:J sew .- teen and t.u'ue~qu.u'iers .n,.Lao.is. ".u`.\)i` .- over, nearly the \\ liulc* _oi' the four ..iil- lions has already hm-n [mi i,_ lay Lu; . g. :- ing fund.so thattiie next year we at ..il. be in pos=ession of a proper:`._v worth pra- bablynot less than 18 millions, wni..-n wiil have cost the cmnt'i'y only about - two and a half mil|'ions. ` In the mean. time we have be -n getting excellent . interest for the outlay, at._t!~_e rate of 5 "per cent. per annun, which, as tie` noney was raised at 3:} percent, show a net annual profit of 1:} per cont.` All the net earnings that remain after the 5 per cent. interest has been paid on the su -- scribed capital are. divided in the follow- ing proportions-`-viz : 71 per cent. of the whole goes as` dividend to the ordinary shareholders; 15 par cent. representing Egypt s royalty;,16 per cent. is 0 assigned. to the f0uncle1's _shnres, of which there are a hundred thousand, Value 3100 -each; 2-per cent. is p:i_va_=~le _to te directors; and 2 per com. by way of bonus lo the company's PiIipli)_\'H.~'. The "net dividend paid during the last three 5 sd0uhtle..s seems 'nigh for so "s ill inenihered that te nominal capi- .coi11pany.including large grants of land, `paid -laborers employed upon tue years, r.uigin,; fr.nn 17 to 21 .1) cent. a- security, but it "must be r.--' tal of the concern by no n1.-.ix< 5 repre~:ents -all the ,:_nne_.' sunk in it. The total expenditure or money on .llit ` canal down to the time when the Brit- ish Government sought the K"-ie.li_ve'.-s shares, a:no..ntod to a little over-18 ma- lions. but ihissum didnot by a.i_v means represent the total cost. 'l`ho Khedive s original concession` granted extraordinary privileges to the canal water privileges, quarries. ci1stoins'dm~s. etc. One ot the conditions of the con- cession, also, was that the K|iedi\e should `procure forced labor for the ex; ecution of the work, and for a long period the nuniber of forced "or un-l cangilranged from 25,000. to 30,000. When lshmail Pasha succeeded to the Khedival throne, and declined to ratify the valuable concessions granted by his predecessor, he had to pay. the Canal Company no less than 10,000,000,. by way of smart money `As: G-iun vnifhdv-nuvnl nf ft'\Inn.| luhnv ant] V` _uau ,-,5 1 State. `_ne|u,'j B&yB,f.l.llB~DIrl1l;u;.{l,Iy,,l.;.J.l`l,t;)K;,l,'_ say, :p1'ov'( >:':ed keei1e`rii'_iti3i3tn' ,a_t the -Litnj than his investment; In .1875. ()`1`,- fo"m~. ` millions nfBr1tis'h money ~in the pur- ecuasie of Suez Canal shares. , It `was. a s. entirely new departure in administra- tive uletvlwds in this cuumry. and (mu obviously attended zwxth considezrzhlc risk for British` taxpayers and Bx-.x.is creaiit. There was an elem-ut. ah Ill; 5 ' zvhicil, whzttever its` outcume, n-1 pr. dent Guvexmnent coulzl i.vz;o;~o, uni. furlllermnre. it was a y~1'v-cedrant t-'-:"` uuguc-prove dzmgerauushiu lh:~ m..:z-v and mum the duo!` to a '!'0()(idP2I~l()1 _;l`) .- b r. and cul`l'IlMiu 1. Every one svn -Hi ed in the nu 1-.m`x1.s ui' U`.)11a`L_1u-tL~.-u.... A`_I.. 1- _.-._ iIlU,UUU.VUV,-U] Wu uuucuv IIIUIIUJ `IL for the withdrawal of forced labor and other privileges. None of this labor or indemnity appears in "the 'company s capital account, and ._that is one reason why the company` is able to pay such large dividends. There can be no ques- tion as to the success of Lord Beacons- eld s nancial coup. Nevercheless,ei'c is one of at kind which we should be sorry to see repeated. by a British Minister, `for we hold it to he co'ntrzu'y to all prudr.-ut E precedent., if noulso to coxustizutionalj power, and a u e.sure that is t'raught with great dangers to the pu Lu and the `-7 QC-nl-n V ' ` Probably, says The London Star, it does mt need instances to enforce the truth of the statement that the House of Lords always has opposed the will of the eople so long as it. dared, but the fol- Enving extract from v a. speech made by John Bright at Birmingham on Nuvemr ' ber 16, 1880, Mr. Joseph Chain-berl_a. in. presiding, in its description of a scene in the Lords at that date, so. exactly ts theirHome Rule vote as to be striking. The occasion -was the rejection by the Lords of the Compensation for Disturb- ance bill, and Mr. BI~ight's speech that in which he used the still f.unous phrase, Force 18 no remedy. ' He than said: .n'z;~1' ;..-..- .... ...:-.-I....I.. ....._t..... 4.1.... Bil I. o If I were pnrticlllarly anxious that the House of Lords should endure as `long as the sun and the moon, I should Ba) it would be much better to have" some regard for the inte19est.s and sutfer-T ings of the population of Ireland ' than to rush up in a crowd and reject .a. measure which those entrusted with the admiuistratlonof the country declared, V upon their authority and their conscience; to be necessary for the peace of` the na- tion. M ' m._ A __' ,,,,, __;. c 11101 11.. ~n_,:-_L.. u___- Cltllll lllfllhlo . V V The man of color enjoys aiifavor. and f consideration in lllc (.)ll_ World that those Wlln have never visited Europe will find it diicult to coinpnllientz. He, is much made of, pBll.\'d,'H.|ld admired, especially by the fair sex. _ Before we had been long in London I found that, my negro attendant, who was acting _ for nze as Valet and couric.-r, .was' making money at a rapid "rate and in a somewlmt V peculiar .n1an..er. Some of my l`(`1l(ll`S[ may. he zmfnre that the soldiers of the London garri- son, supplement their scanty pay by` taking servant girls ow for a walk in` Hyde Park on Sumlay ul'ternoon. ` On` that day the girls deck 'Ell8lllaBl\'t.`S -out in all their line-.1'_v, and upin,;' lx:o.~ir eni- plo_vers,_ pruim mule in II; tie Park, usu- ally up and d nvu the ba.nl:s of the ser` pentine. 1\'l-em does not like to b(=_al()l?e, and still less Ll(!.`% \\'( man. Hence the . girls feel the necessity of :1 suftable es- cort, not so much 101' the sake of con-A velsation as the look of the thing. The consequence la, that they secure the ser- vices of Lt sold.er, \\ ho ` promenuclcs them in the purl; ft-r a cou,'le of hours fora stipulated sum, after which they escort th_em home and leave thr m at the back door of the 'hou.eo \\`ll(`l'v' they are employed. 'l`here'is :1 re;.;ulzn'turi1f -an infantry man havingto content himself with a shilling, whereas the far ' more stately and itnposim; Life and i Horse Glltil'(l 1'! ceive zts"mll(:lI as a. half a = clown. ' l IlYI,.| _.... I`. ..l. . ....--....A. urn... .-....- 1-. _ On August 8; 1881, `Mr. Bright, then _a member of the Government, was pre- sent at; the Ministerial banquet. at the Mansion house, and, `in response to `loud calls, spoke upon the Irish land bill, which had passed the Commons. In the T course of lusspeech he sa.1d: N ..1': . . _ . _ _:_I .|.-._- __~.- 1... -_ 1' |_._.-; HVIJIDU VI. IllD_DyUC\JIl IIU Utlaltle "I have said there are fears. I have ` fears. After the state of things through which the Irish people have gone in so a many successive periods, it is not, per- haps, quite certain that all remedia measures are not too late. _ 1 will not exl press as strong fear that such is the case- on the contrary, I will express a strong: hope that suchis not the case. It may y be that some_ would say: ' Y `For never can true reooncilement grew ' ` Where wounds of deadly hate have pierced . , dean-" l VVIIUFU WUUIIUS U1 ueuulx deep. . . But as generation after genvration asses, governed by a monarchy, kindly. iberal, benecient, like ours, legislated for by a Parliament anxious to do jus- tice to all the people under its sway, `I will not doubt, I will believe, that `what- ever the frenzy in the minds of the Irish llb HKLVU PIEFCCQ I0 ` people", whatever the `gloonrltlnat now rests upon that country,ai_ln-this` may pass, away. `ind that the time may come`, and; come goon, when in` Ireland it` shall be ' felt as much. as. it. ie fell; in. Eng_land,?- that, withall its faults, our Governnient does intend to` do rightly by `.tlae.;1rlsln .. |.pe`pl-9". _ V , She-.-What swell. turnouts .Maud's new . ; beau always has.. "He--Yes. I have I. just found out about t`hem_--he gets $3 a. day for exerciging the.`horse.-1.-Desn:ois u_ Tribune. ` . 3 - .. John Briglnt and Ireland. U7z CANAL. sHAaes. ,8w_elIv./. Il\1llIly(_III|I3`. -The older observations indicated that l Venus rotated in between. -twenty-xhreell and twenty-foul` hours, giving it days 4 and nights about equal to those of the} earth. In order to settle. the qhestion it ` has recently been proposed to apply the spectroscope. It is known` `that the spectrum of a celestial body which. is. rapidly approaching the earth the` spec- t1'oscopichne_s are shifted toward. the blue, while in the spectrum of a fastre-A treating body the lines are- shifted to- ward the re .- V - !IVI,- _, __'__`I, I. _`_ I_____ .,..,-.1 _'_- ` 4---- IIUVV VCIBU V CLIUD I-CVUIVCD UL] _ll.D GJLIS`. Every one who watches the glorious evening sxar growing brighter and brighter in thesuuset sky during the coming months will certainly be -eager to hear the latest news from the astrono- ' melts who are trying to nd out whether Venus has, successive days and nights like the earth or has onlya. day side and a night aide.-Youth s Companion. UIICII l.\llICe , ` -. Of 5course, no one.` knows whether there are inhabitants upon.Venus or not, but we do know that Venus has an "at- mosphere, and that in its atmosphere `watery vafmr exists and clouds oat, and that upon the surtfac_e of the planet the fcrce of gravitation Is `not. very dif-' ferent from that which it mamfests _on the surl'acepf the earth; Accordingly. there are_ some reasons to be urged in be- half of the opinion that Venus may` `be an inhabited world. L T)... 21.` ._ _ I.-IA' _L' TT,_-___ `L , I.___.!_j _'__ Hus Cutur souuntlmian So-oiu-on Inf Hlhi A I`:-enrclcmco Over the \V||lte"!`rnuh; ' b all ILIIIQLIIUCQ `V Ulla! But if one half of Venus `be buried in t emiless-night while the 'other half lies 1 beneathra never-setting sun, it is evi- dent that the inhabitants of that planet ` must have expt-riences that would be most strange and trying to us. So the question whether .Veuus really does ro- tate on its axis once in 225 days, the_pe- : riod of. its revolution aroundthe sun, de- rives an added finterest from the cuusid- t erutiun that the-planets possibly has in- hubitz_tnts-. - ` ._ ,_l .1-.. _l_-__.__-.g__,_ :__ :|:_`_L_,.: L` W; Sneoulationo In "t.l nexIQ"I.gl||t hselence as to Wllnt Sort of 5 Time v'l`hey HTave_e tl_t wilL:be,sren1emberedthat about two vears :ago the --famous Itahara astrono- .mer, `St-hiaparelli, iamnnncecl that he lladtdiscovered "that Venus," which is a world very slightly smaller than ours, makes only one turn on its axis in going `once around the sun. It would follow from this that on Venus there is no suc- cession of days and nights as upon the earth, but that perpetual day reigns on one side uf the planet and perpetual night on the other. In oth_er.wurds. .if Schia.- parelli is ri,-.:ht, Venus glways presents the same face tne sun, just ast e moon fm-en-r turns the same hemisphere towzml the c-urth. lI\n, 1.. .,R A.I.,. _-_-_ __'_...J _:.].. -2 UUVI uI\.| LVIIC K (lIlllo' The inhabitants of the sunward side of Venus, then-1t' there be an_v--never see the sun set, while the 'inl.abi`tants of the other sidvuever see the sun at all,~unless they visit the opposite hemisphere of then: globe; ' r urn-nvcn nn nnn` lrhnmu nyhnthnr '1`he principle has been used in `_meas- 1 uring the rate of the sun s rotation. The lines are shifted tosvurd the blue on the eastern and t0\\'arJ the red on` the` west-` ; ern edge of the sun, and , by measuring the amount of shiftmg the rate of rota.- tion is found. It is easy to, see that the same method may be applied to find out ` how vast Venus revolves on its axis._ 1'.` _____ -__l __ _l, AI, -_, The'Loudent Noise Ever Board. No thunder from the skies was ever accompanied witha__roai_'; of such ` vehe- mence as that which Issued from the `tin-oat of the great volcano in Krakatoa, an islet lying in the Straits of Sunda. be- tween Sumatra and Java, at 10 o'clock on Monday morning, Aug. 27, 1883. As that dreadful Sunday night wore on the noise increased in intensity and fre- quency.` The explosions succeeded each other so rapidly that a continuous roar seemed to issue from the island. The critical moment was now approaching, and the outbreak was preparing for a. majestic culmination. ' ` 'I`hn nunnln A? `R-jriuuio Air` I-Int alone` _An Atlantic City. N. J., photographer I produces a- photograph. at a single ex- . posure, which gives tivedifferentimages - | of the same person in dierent pusitnons. This isaccumphshed byplacing tne eit- ` ter between two mirrurs placed. at an 1 angle of `five degrees to `each other. The double reflection between these mirrors 7 produces four images of the person J laced in front of them,-the p1'incipIes 7 mg the same as that of the ordinary 1 '-kaleidoscope. The orumal face is made `in proti'le>am1<~#.tlxe vreecttons ' give the ; ;fu'l facezrcppoeite p1ume,~and two rear .h .'Y7,iC;:V_-Q: 9 efeeult is} curious` and inter- . Testing. andgit has: been suggested. .-would .- , be useful -in ~ident_it'yit_:g. ,0I'il1`I.inluSo"`P` hPo"pular Science News. - . J I_.I.Il1JCIIl\.l \JlLllllIlI(l|lI\J'l-lg _ _ The people of Batavia did not sleep that night. Their windows quivered with the thunders from Krakatoa, which resounded like the discharge of artillery ~ in their streets. Finally at 10 o'clock on \ Monday morning a. stupendous convul- sion_ took placewhich far transcended any of the shocks which had preceded it. Tins supreme effort it was which raised the mightiest noise ever heard on 1 the globe. Batavia is. ninety-ve miles : distant from Krakatoa; At Carimon, Java, 355 miles away, reports were ` heard on that Sunday morning which * led to the" belief that there must be some vessel in the distance which was dis- charging its guns as signals of distress. The authorities sent out boats to make a search; they presently returned-, a_s no- _ thing could be found in want of snccor. "l`l.L. I`..r\4\rI .. llvni-A Ql'\IIrI1`.1 Il1lI;l'IlI 4113:1113 Iyllllls L/\lLIl\A UU l.Ul.Iu\J. tll -VI Gill! UL DIIUUUIQ The reports were sounds _which came all the way from Krakat0a._ At Mucus- _aar, in Celebes, loud explosions attracted were hastily sentout to nd out what was the matter. _The sounds had `travel- ed lrum the Straits of Sunda, a distance of 909 ini.es. But mere hundreds of miles Will not snice to illustrate the ex- the notice or eveeybody. Two steamers ` i traordinary distance to which the great- est noise that ever was heard was able . to penetrate. The gures lv ve to be ex- i pressed in thousands. Th.. seems al.-| most incredible, but it is ct K't."l1ly true. ` In the Victoria plains, inWest Australia. ` the shepherds were startled Toy noises` like heavy cannonading. It was some time afie1'war'dbefore `they learned that tranquillity -had been disturbed by the grand events at Krakatoa, 1700 miles l awa_v.-Youth s Companion. . 1 Caua man (ltermille for himself the modeof the disposal of his r_cma1us after death, or is such pisposal entirely in the . hands of his executors? Mr. Aubrey o 'Richardsoub has written a little volume entitled The Law of C_rem'at1on.-which takes the view that in the eye of English i law there can be no property in a corpse. i This infact has been authoritatively de- 7 cided, and in accordance with this prin- ` ciple the direction of a` testator to his executors to hand overihis body after.` death to a person named in his will, in - _ order that it might be disposed of acco:d- l ; ing to his directions, has. been held to be i void. This -is a grievance of which the 1 Cremation Society not uunaturally com- l Flain. In France, Italy and Germany It E I as been removed.-Ex.` A Man C_uhnot Have Himself` Cremated! LiI\7V` ll: While my l:i;iul:*se1'va11t. Mike, was in London he seriously inlerlered with this source ol revenue of the Britisu army, It seemed us il"all the cooksium srrvunb girls in South Kensiugton, were bent on having llllll walk; \\'lLu Llneui on Sunday, conscious of the l':.ct~t1mt his color would attract more zi!L-:nl-iou lo Lliemselves than an or .in-iry ti'ou1_-cl`, or evena ser- geant of the I-Iorse Guards. So active was the competition that _I lmveknown Mike to be paid as much as six or svven shilling,s for promenadings witu .-stout and mature-looking cooks for a couple of hours, along the Vanity Fair of `H, de Park, on a Sunday afternoon. In `Dun-in rl.u utlulxfltrh nf' flu: fair aov `Lisa on `THE. !. LAN`E1N.\/.EN"lJS .' ` T Fivefhotograpins In` One, ' ..I LV\IL\. NORTHERN ADVANCE DLIII :7-Adveruse 1n. _ THE ADVANCE. SUBSACR]BE~]; CAPI1`rA L, A ,s25o,ooo, |$Ioo,ooo.ooo. Get the ba.by s `picture for the "Mail. no ch 2 nrg, Life And .1 ans, U11 a t.JuuuiI_v ustcn uuuu. _ In Paris the attention of the fair sex to my colored gentleman became a a source ot' considerable en1l>ai'i'assiiieiit to me. and 1 h-.u.l great trouble to pre- vent them from completely turning the boy s head. 1`hey served, however, to convince him that he was inime-..surably superior to all other men servants of the white race. His conceit became amaz- ing, and _I remember that especially 3 when, on the day after the death of the I late Kin,r:, of Hanover in Paris, I went to his Majesty's house in the Rue de Pros- burg to write my name on the visitors book. 1 was astonished to see Mike .in the act of coming out. I had not time to speak to himat tile inninent, but a ininuie or two later, when inscribing my name, Iwas horried to see, in. a. large and scrawling hand, that of Mike at the top of the page and guring just be- tween that of Lord Lyons, the British Ambassador, and that of Duc d Aumale. (Wu ununhinnn lunnna T innn1or`iuro`\r in- ALL BABIES PHQTOGRAPHED` FREE OF CHARGE `AND PRESENTED WITH A BEAUTI- i FULLY FINISHED CABINET IPHOTO. ' - _ go. I-I. LYON Ge soN,j 9.0. Box I32, . Ban-19;} mun mrf, PORTLAND CEMENT. i people take , any brand of I Biscuit their `grocer gives theni but V WISEPEOPL I i'l'oronio Biscuii & 0on f. ;insist on having those_ made % by the .l1llIUd.5S.UUl', uuu hllilh U1 uuu u nulllulc On reaching home I. immediately in- quired what on earth he meant -by such a piece of presumption, whereupon he was guod enough to inform me that he had uverhe:u'd me saying that it was the corn ct. thing tn do, and that inasmuch as the Crown Prince of Hzuuiver--n`ow known as the Duke of Uuuiberland_-- had Lipped" him on several occasions % quite libei'ail_v. Mike considered it only . proper up take L..is means of conveying to him his expressmn uf symp-ut.h_v for the loss he had su:suuiied.-l\Iudei~n Society-. lTHE UH) REl|ABlE MICTIUNEEH |% G. :3. FORDY 3' Are a aneoia1tyL and"prtiea intendig to have sales, -I ill consuit their own interests by placina their sales in his hands. . ' in u . _-n___ _, .- .-.. "F5-&2a".;};"x.?{a":"vEE' z;om'ou olce will be attended to. 35 L G. R. roan. {LHNDLES ALL KINDS or AUCTION I I sums. DAY snnmz mu 2. snvnms Acu.,| INCORPORATED 1ae1. T 1 41.30;-` x*.VIn;t&vax-out Path (in. Deposits; LT.he,8eouriI:Y:~fo1b-. -Depository in abpim . I ` 1*,sAom9!n`1!undnbted-% % 3. - 5!lV 31ock.:.south side. Dunloi).atr9)., a.,s_.t o_t:,the,Po_atAumce. . ; . _ 3 _`8_-]y BABY FOOLISH ' OI . DERS RESPECTFILLLY SOLICITED. Mr. James Hnddart, the founder and a managing director of the new line of steamers connecting Canada and Austra- lia is now in London, say 'l`he Star, and daily holds 1nt'ornial levee at his oice in Billiter street, City, so numerous are the callers to congratulate him on. hav- ing imitated and successfully developed such an important and long-needed ser- vice, Mr. Huddart is an active, thought- Aful, shrewd, far-seeing, young-looking Australian, with a rm and enthusiastic belief 11) his mission to establish direct` regular and permanent - (;om1nun_icat1on- . between the two great British communi-- ties that live on opposite sides of the Pacic. Tyneside tolks have reason to rejoice in the new departure, for Mr. Buddart s Pacic service means the construction, of new. _powerful and splendidly-equipped `steamers, and the entering into contracts in` this con-' nection is one of the chief reasons for Mr. Huddart s present visit to England. , ll `LI.ulAou-t hon nnnnf. nrnntinnllmr u : V 45.1: T` Petseverance In using a mu give teliel, even an cases of long standmg. when a cure seemea unpoisible and Me seemed hardly worth lmng n.__.n-`..|_ as - an _ - T 45- AA I-`ARM STOCK SALES x>'-;:{~[yIT3<}%i"1"e'."c'.'ii'cI3I-' 5:330 ANTHRAGITE AND BITUMINOUS Water Lung, Plaster of Paris, kc. SAPI YAL PRES! NTED EXCEEDS Iuammncs AGENT. on-non: ' ' Yanns Ross Block. Foot of Toronto Street" Telgnhone. i _ V Accident ILnsu%ranee%.%` at ]0ul fet. V Aim_high. eaid the c_aptain. "If you 1 do not hit the line yen aim at you` may hit the one beyond it. , A1m for `B65 2 poundeof butter a year fromeach cow: for a few cents in peund more than your a neighbor gets for his products; for a few 1 more bushels or tons per _acre than he 1 gets, andgenerally for ajtttle better re: ` suits-than"he._obtains. You` may hit the line and _vou.mignt shootbeyond `it, but that iebetter than .- sheeting into the dirt `J '_ , Frank Jackson. BAR R-II_=:, *~` _N. CV:-`rrespon_deAnce Invited.` ---- BUCCESSOR TJ -Dealer in 23-Iv. NOV. 28 2-iy- V 1'11. LJUULIGIVD |JIvU\.LJu vnunv vv JJIIEIIIIIVIO Mr. Huddart has spent practically the whole of his life in Australia, his father having been one of the pioneer captains in Antipodean waters. He is the senior partner in the rm of Huddart, Parkerv & Co., a firm that has had a large eet of intercolonial steamers at ;work for many years past. He has been aper'- manent meuibet of the lllelouurne har- bor Trust, and, is one of the test -known men of business in that Queen City of the Sou 11. Mr. ` Huddart has `lately i been uravelingin Canada, where he had ` interviews with the leading statesmen of ; -the Dominion. He has achieved-a high success at the outset by establishing at working and connecting alliance between ` the Canadian _Paoi0,`.Raijlvyay.and. his 7 Pacic steamdhipserviee. ` 2 ` 1 . a We are fully prepared. with_a stock of TEXT BOOKS, SCRIBBLERS`, EXERCISE BOOKS, &c., &c. Mail o1'de1`.< receive prompt attention. All School Books supplied with :1 strong Manilla cover free of charge. School Books! School Books! PUBLIII SCHOOL... FOR AND I ;(}0LLEG|ATE msmm Journals Blank Books made any size and Ruled to any pattern. All work qua!-aiiieed u be rat-class. A - ` I Music a specialty in Cloth or Full Leather, Staff and Limp Covers. `Portfolios made of any size and style to order. Repairing of every `description of Binding done on short notice. There is nothing in the Binding and Ruling line that cannot be done here and guaranteed first-class. - Parties having Books. &c., to bind need only send a post card "or note to the bindery, when a representative will call for the work and return the ..-...... ...I-H... I-!...|..L...-I DDYIVIPG Tf\\`l7 ARTE TIPDIKQ (V AQITI THE WHOLE GROUND Manufacturer * and Binder of- Blank Books Lodge Books vb savvy VI: VII!) vlllu I II II It. ` I. nvllvxiuivv VVIII \JI'Il| guy; 1: 1 same when u:sheEi.1>"I`ii'cEs1'.'dw AND TERMS casii COVERS Mr. James lluddart in London.