n 1! TOPICS rOB, W03CEX. Why Womcji Work. Jt is carious that the world has yet to be •OBTinced that women do not love to work any better than men do. They are creoit- ed with dependence, with a love of ease and fiixury, and yet when a salaried position is in question the women has to take less bc- •anse "she needs less." It can not be because she spends less, for the extrav-gance of woman was dwelt upon by Solomo i axid Jeremiah, and it is a song that has nev«r known a rest. The reason er the difference in wages is generally ©and to be in the assertion that women TTho do not need x supporter who aave few esx)onsibilities crowd into the paid occapa- tions. There is an inconsistency here. If she loves ease why does she work If she spends more, how is it she needs less The truth ia that very few women work from any other reason but necessity. Here a«d there is one who loves mdependence. works for it, and deservei it, and here and tkere is another who would rather work than forego certain luxuries, and she earns them, but the majority of women work b*. «aus€ they have responsibilities, and as a elase they are more reliable, sober and eeonomical workers, for no woman with a family of little children gambles away their bread and butter, or no sister or daughter who ir, of necessity, the bread-winner, wastes wliat she earns, and comes home to a sad, hungry family, bringing them emp- ty Lands and an indifference to their E*eds. nrw !F.NTIMKHT.\L TOU.VG LADIES HUOTLD MANAGE UEALTUT APrETITEa. There are few women who can't be chaiM- ing if they earnestly set aboutitâ€" even while catmg. I mention this test of feminine grace because it is a severe one. The pro- «€?9 of filling the stomach ordained hj na- tnre is vulgar in i'self, and a great deal of â- daintiness ia required in the woman who would cat unrepcllantly. Fried oysters are u Kore trial to the ether, al girl who sits down to them with her admirers after a late the- atrical pcrformanc3. It has been five or six uonrs since diuner, and she is as hungry as a hear that has lived on its paws all winter. She knows that bedtime ia close ahead, and she will not have to eadure her corset long if she does not tighten it from the inside. Bnt f. bis appetito is disenchanting in a «aiden, and fried oyster.=; are greasy. The problem before her is now to put the seven OYEtera into h;r33lf witaoutonce convincing i:;o yo'JDg m-n that her Btomach is about Itkehisow-n in its periodical call for food. Th';re is oi risk in the matter that no skill can v.-i.rliv eliiriuato. The best rule is to p;iton i-. "fxpreHion of very mild disJain ti.l. a.s though you took it in nn- Dou't overdo thi" and look as â- iK'd, lait just elevate the brows !.• ;ii:itly. and try to give the im- pri --: '11 i-;" v a lo'.erate a fried oyster, but • â- n t i .i;.x- I af er it. I watched a slender, r,r;i ,â- ' f-:i, .i -ul-fic.d creature in a fciahion- t;i)'iS'j I'ne otlier nii,'ht, and saw " lier i'jn'jrtir.eut --ihe was shock- i-r r: f-i 111 1 tlli,- l A-iVio 'il-T '^1' .â- - ri' riiuis whatever todisgui.se the fact oil" w .-• t:ij:i\'mg them mightily. At the table. Perhaps •(â- wlif'.iier he adored her or iif.'t. Wii.s putting th.e oysters into y halves, chewing iham with ;:-..! -j'li- â- ' Ki-i'o, swallowin.; plenty of ir." i an 1 ._• :t cal'.bagc along wiihthem, and 'ha the next t lb! 'â- at a thicker and older wo- man, who praotic'd the art of oyster eating :«! I have indie it. d it. Her f cial expression wa-, clever. She slipped in the food in big pi?"j.s when her c iiiip.iuion wasn't looking, and niI)hlL'l when h' was looking. She got .away with a hearty meal without appearing to have tj.kc!i anything to apeak of, and it waa only the empty plate.'i that revealed the bet. She was nut less skilful in drinking her half of a auort of champagne. The glass was lifted to her lips like the hand of a juecn to kiss h â€" mouth shut over barely an inch of the bi;..i there was no slopping or gurgling the wine trinkled neatly down her throit, but with quite sufScient clerity. When starting to go out, with considerable of the fluid etfervescinc; in her brain, she failed for a dreamy instant to recognize her rtflectioa iii a full length mirror, aud triel to t-irn out to lot herself pa?9 heri-If. lut Ill.\ ia^itantly, fairy. u i no b'uuder w;i3 ccn by nobody .She recovered iier eqnaidmity an i dopartei as smoothly as a An Ingenious Clock. A vc.'-y ii^gcnious electric clock, for use in railway stati.'ins, has recently been exhibited la Bo:^iton. It g ves automatically the sig- nals for starting trains at the proper time, and it is automatically regulated at noon f ach day by electric impulse from some as- tronomical station. Though the details of the apparatus are rather complicated, the principlo is simrle. The mechanism for giving the signals shows two discuss, each piercod with 1440 holes, arranged in spirals of 24 turns, with 60 holes in each turn, umall metallic pegs are inserted in the holes corresponding to any given minute and hour, and the contact Jof these with an electric •onductor allows passage of the current ter the signal. When any change is made in the time for «$tarting trains the pegs arc shifted. One, two, three, or more success- ive or different signals can be given for each train. It is proposed to connect all the Stations of a railway with the m.ain office, so that signals for starting train i will be given from a single apparatus. Some First Thlnss. The first lucifer match v. aa made in 1723, and the wind rose to a gule the instant it was scratched. The first horse railroad waa started in 1626, and the conductors had forty-five years the start of the bell-punch. The first newspaper tdvertisement appear- ed in 1652, and it has taken just 231 years to convince some business men that it is a good investment. The first temperance society in this coun- try was organized at Saratoga in 1826. The opposition secured a foothold in 1492. Glasa windows were introduced in Eng- land in the eighth cantury. The little boys of the seventh century had no object in t]m)wing stoues at unoccupied buildings. Kerosene was first used for illuminating ia 1826. Its servant-girl blasting proper- ties were discover ad at five o'«lock the next morning. PESSONAXiXTIXS. Tlw World of NotsbiM-Kmlnent Pee^s, Frlnoes. Peers, and Otliets. The son of Anthony Trollope is to publish the autobiography wtich he left. A hundred and five cows are on the dairy farm of the Prince of Wales at Sandringham. The parents of the English Postmaster- General celeorated their golden wedding lately. The Dake of Campo-Medina has bought the late Henri Vieuxtempt's collection of violins and bows. Sixty-five trunks are all the baggage the Princess Louise carries when travelling but it comprises the luegageof her suite aa well cs her own. Five thousand dollars have been left to chil dren deserts by their parents in Paris by the late Louis Blanc. Neuralgia is the bet« noire of Bismarck, he being obiged to stop in the midst of a sentence sometimes, while speaking, en ac- count of it. Fifteen langaaees were spoken by tha wooibroker of Philadelphia, Thomas Wilson, who committed suicide the other day at Niagara Falls. A paper on "Temperance" waa lately read before a religious society of Providence, Rhode Island, by Miss Alice Stone Black- well. Mr. Dennis, the British antiquarian, has bought the site of the temple of Sardis, Asia Minor, and great hopes are entertained of the discoveries among the ruins. The Duchess of Sutherland, the Duchess of Westminster, Lady Mount Temple, the Countess Browolow, and the Countess Elles- mere all wear the temperance blue ribbon, Dr. 0. W. Holmes says that, much as he has heard of the roots of the tongue, and although he has taught anatomy for thirty- five years he has been unable to find them. Gambetta had an eye glass, and always refused to have a full picture taken, pre- ferring to pose in profile. Mr. Healy's por- trait of him ia thought to bs the best one in existence. The young secretary of the Chinese Min's- terat Washington, being asked at an after- noon tea if he would take one or two lumps of sngar in his tea, answered, "No sugar, no cream, one spoon." The Sultan of Zanzibar became so infatu- ated with strawberry ice-cream and pen- dulum clocks while on his visit to Paris that he has secured an expert confectioner and watchmaker aa part of his retinue. The Shah of Persia, the North American chiefs, the New Zealand chiefs, Catywayo, and the "Indian contingent" have all de- clared that the most wonderful thing in England is the Crystal Palace. The Postmastcr^ General of England, Mr. Fawcett, is entirely blind the Rscoiver and Accountant-General to the Post Oflico, Mr. George Richardson, is entirely deaf ;and an official in the Admira'ty is both deaf and dumb. Mr. Andrew Camogie, of New York, a native of Dumferlinc, N. B., has given twenty-five thousand dollars toward the fund for the London College of Music, which has been acknowledged by the Prince of Wa'es with cordiality. When the Chinese Emperor Quang-Su saw the comet ho sent for tha Astronomer Royal, who told him that it meant the gods were displeased with the Ministers of Wor- ship and Public Instriiotion and the minis- ters received their letters of dismissal a few hours later. A proposal by some native gentlemen of Bombay to provide a guarantee fund by means of which qualified medical women may begin practic3 in India has been ap- pr ived by Qaesn Victoria in spite of her dis- iikeof the female practitioner ia Groat Bri- tain. Mr. Trevelyan han discovered that the people in the west of Ireland are living on sea-weed rather than go to tho workhouses provided. He has held that they only pre- tended to be starving, but it a::pears as though unless relieved they will carry the deception so far as really to die. M. About has subscribed largely for the assistaxice of the victims of the inundations in Alsace, where he lived till the occupation of the Germans. Last year he introduced into society his young daug'-ter Mile. Valentine, who has simplicity of disposition and solid mental gifts. A senes of illustrations to Poe's " Riven' was finished by Dore before his death, which it is thought will rank among the most original results of his genius. They are owned by Messrs. Harper Brothers, and Will be published as a companion vol- ume to their edition cf the Ancient Mariner with the Dore plates. The Hon. D. L. Macpherson, Speaker cf the Canadian Parliament, has by ordering the chair occupied at one time by the Princess Louise to be cut down and use! fcr the Speker'a chair, roused the ire of the Cana- dians, who would like the chair to be placed in the Historical Museum rather than in the privato house of the Speaker, who has the right to take the chair used by him as his own personal property. Mr. W illiam Grey, who ia the heir pre- sumptive to the Earl of Stamford, and will, on coming to full inheritance, have an in- come of fcur hundred thousand dollars a year, is a grandson of the naturalist Gil- bert White of Selbourne. The grandfather of t:ie late Earl of Stamford, owned the whole boroDgh of Ashton-under-Lyno, and held all the freehold with the exception of one cottage for which he offered as many sovereigns aa would cover the roof. "No, friend Grey," said the old Quaker who own- ed it, " Ashton-under-Lyne belongs to me and thee. You can't have it aU." In King Heky«FolE;*s DoBlflioiifc Miss Gordon Gumming baa written a nar rative of her tour among the volcan c I»kes and craters of the main Island of Hawaii. Of these extraordinary and fieiy scenes she gives us some admirable sketches, less oeau- tifnl indeed than her exquisite views of the Tahitian peaks, bnt unsurpassed in their way for weird sublimity and awe-inspiring grandsur. Among the ever-varying crags and shiftDg :pools of the Lake of Fire on Kitanea, Milton's poetic fancies seem almost to have taken actual shape. The boiling mass never twice presents the same aspect Bometimesthe Lake disappears altogether for a while semetimes it lies sleeping in the centre ot deep solid cliffs sometimes, again, it seethes and foams against enor- moua temporary pinnacles of hardened lava. Even the apparently rocky surface on which the visitor stands to look down into the mountain pool is but the thinnest and moat brittle crust, bridging over the treach- eroua mass ot subterranean fire. Miss Camming was fortunate enough, too, to happen upon the exact moment of an erup- tion, and to see rivers of inrandescent lava break out over the bed of the great crater, which, when she first arrived, lay cold and grey within the circ Ine cliffs, ao that she could walk across it without serious danger. She also cime.in for an earthquake. Some of the curious cup-shaped vents in the ex- tinct crater of Haleakala remind one strong- ly of the lesser craters in the moon and indeed the whole of this very dry and ver- durelees Hawaiian mountain district must cloaely resemble lunar scenery only, as Miss Camming rightly notes, the immenae- well-like depth of the moon's crater at once distinguishes them from anything of the sort to be seen on the eurface of our planet. Copernicus, the finest in shape among the lunar heights, is 12,000 feet deep in the central pit, and Gaesendi is 9,600. Siill, the general effect of Miss Cumming'a sketches ia ridiculously like that obtained from a view of the moon through a piowerf ul telescope. In both weeet the naked result of volcanic energiea, unaffected by the dis- integrating influences of vegetation or of humid atmospheric changes. King Kalakaua waa lately compelled to make a tour of the world. It appears that the King's first care on his return to his de- cadent little realm was to build a new cathedral, to complete and furnish his own palace, and to make pr parations on a grand scale for the coronation of himself and his Queen â€" the throne and crowns to be im ported from Paris, and all the ladies of Honolulu to appear in sweeping trains end full Cjurt dress as wo-n at Buckingham Palace. If this is all the good that semi- barbarous chiefs obtain from a tonr in Eur- ope, it would be much better that they shsuld stay at home. â€" Pall Mall GazfUt. A HmAoo Dramatist. Babu Keshub Chunder San, the Hindoo religious reformer, whosi visit to this coun- try will not have been forgotten, has writ- ten a native drama, the first representation of which has bsen given Calcutta with unusual tclat. The play, which ia very long â€" longer, but apparently more lively than a modern Drury Line Pantomiiie â€" is described by native critics as designed "to inculcate the purifying principles of reli- gion in the garb of hintrionic representa- tion." The vicea of "Young Bengal" are gone for iu a vi\idly effective style. A heavy drinking bout, the sad results, the interpoeition of the police, the insanity of the hero's wife, the anger of the virtuous father at the sight of the Brahmo reforming preachers, the- repentance of the hero, the appearance of a hermit, thj tournament between Vice and Virtue, the reconciliation of all concerned, and the triumph of the Brahmo principles are all exhibited with great effect. A Model Home. One of our exchanges has a column head- ed "Our Home," and at the top it gives an illustration which is supposed to represent that halloft-ed retreat. The hiisbaud and father ia represented as reading a bread board the mother, dressed in a buutinf dress with an oversKirt two feet longer than the dress proper, ia reading a cigar box or a chiecker board and the rest of the fami- ly, some thirteen or fourteen souls, cluster around the table reading different kinds of thinf.j while a daughter in one corner of the room ia climbing up on the keyboard of a piano with her feet, and her face is wreath- ed in a smile that wraps her rosebud mouth twice around her Grecian head and buries itself in her clustering hair. One of tho boys 1: as dropsy of the brain, and his pants are too short. Another is trying with great diffi- culty to tie the cat's tail around the table- leg, and a little daughter is pouring the saw- dust vitals out of a rag doll down a knot hole in the floor. It is a perfect picture of home contentment and perennial joy. â€" Lara mie Boomerang. The greatest friend of truth is time her greatest enemy is prejudice and her con- stant companion is humility. Deal very gently with those who are on tbe downhill of fife. Your own tiitae is coming to be where they now are. Yoa too are "step- ping westward." Soothe the restlessness of ace by amusement, by consideration, by non- interference, and by allowine plenty of o;os- pation to fall into the hands that long for it. But let it heot their own choosing, and cease to order their ways for them as though they were children. A Toothsome Morsel. This from the Madison Wis.) Democrat, conveys its own moral â€" Hold on We are cognizant of the fact that an aching tooth was laat night cured by the application of St. Jacobs Oil. The young fellow got mad over his raging tooth in the ball room, and rushed straightway to a drug store where he applied the good old Garmm Remedy in ten minutes the tcothaclie had gone. Petersburgh, Va., produced an icicle so large that its fall killed a horse. Even down South there is no scarcity and nothin-^ to lament over. " Th« World's Dispensary and Inralids Hotel, at Buffalo, N. Y.. destroyed by fire a year ago, is rebuilt and full of patients. For "Invalid's Guide Book," giving particn- lara and terms of treatment, address, with two aUmps, Worlds Dispensabt Associa Tios, Bntfalo, N. Y. The air i* BO clear at Montelair, N. J. .that you can stand on Eagle Eoek and detect the clam in a caldron of chowder at Coney Is- land. Young, middle-aged, or old men, suffering from nervous debility or kindred affections, should addr ss, with two stamps, for large treatise, World's Dispevsaby Medical A.SSOCIATION, Buffalo, N. Y. The New York Legislature is grappling with the toy pistol.â€" Sa^ LaJx Tribune. This ia good news The pistol has invaria- bly proved fatal to its grappler.â€" Z?o«to« Post. A Secret The secret of beauty lies mpure blood and I good health, without the one the other is impossible. Burdock Blood Bitters is the grand k«y that unlocks all the secretions, opens the avenue to health by purifying and regulating all the organs to a proper action. It curesall Scrofulous Diseases, acts on the Blood, Liver, Kidneys, Skin and Bowels, and brings the bloom of health to the pallid cheek. 14 "From the manner in which some people spend their time, one would suppose they had a ninety years' lease of life with two re- newed clauses embraced in it." Vegeti.ne.â€" The great success of the VEGETrsE as a cleanser and purifier of the blood is shown beyond a doubt by the great numbers who have taken it, and received immediate relief, with such remarkable cures. Notliiagwill effacs the stains on character qiiicker than money. â€" Hartford Sunday Journal. We congratulate yon on your raise. â€" New York News. For Throat and Lnng niseases, liowcl Com plninlH, Elc, It is triily a marvel. T.lo Oil, besides exciting appetite, promotini? digestion and checking fermentation on the stomach, antidotes or counteracts the effect of uric acid, which pro- duces rheumatism by destroying the oxolate and phosphate of lime in the bones, and tho membranes inclosing the joints. Piicc 25 cents per bottle. Sold by all drug- gists. (Lclcctric is not Electric.) A story writerhas finished a sketch call- ed "Lifted Oat of Herself." I would be diffi- cult for BeniliP.rdt to be treated in that way and have anything left. Tho Talent of Surcesp. Is nothing more than (loin;; weU tii;tt which is to be done, do- ing it promptly and at tho right timeâ€" very s'mple etaentialp, but not too common in com- bination. This exactly expresses the qualities o( that famous remedy for corns, Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor. It never fails to do the work well, does it promptly, and at the light place never hangs lire like a loaded gun going otr at tho wrong time; acts only on the parts affected, and doing its work in tho nice- st manner imaginable. Try Putnam's Corn Extractor. IJeware of substitutes. N. C. Pol- soa Co., Kingston, pioo's. The woman who is interviev*! bj' a sew- ing machine salesman suffers more or lea? from sewer gas. Davy k. Cla'k, Druggists, Renfrew, date of J 'ne 3rd, write," Burdock Blood Bitters though comparatively a new preparation, has taken the lead in this locality as a blood purifier, our sales of it being equal to that of all other medicines used for the purpose during the lastvcar." 18. The Boston Transcript's musical critic chai-acterizes Mr Maas' piano playing as "eminently musicianly." It is aorrowing- fully tosje the English language maltreated- ly. An Admonition. Toneglojt a cough or cr.ld, is but to in vite consumption, tliat destroyer of the haman race. Hagywd's Pectoral Balsam will cure the cough and allay all irritation of the bronchial tubes and iungs, and effectually remedy all pulmonary complaints, such as Asthma, Bronchitis, Whooping Cough, c. Inipcrtaat. When ZOiTisitorleareNe,, Baggage Expressage and Ca^^'^ktt stop at Grand Union Uot»t^ -^ Central Dep ot. 450 elegant 'C a cost of one mUlion dollars Z upwards per day. Europel,*?'^^ Restaurant supplied with th cars, stages and elevated raiL*^ pots. Families can live bettVrT^ at the Grand Union Hotel .i, '"' 1* flrstHjlass hotel in the city? »i»i A woman of a certain age W man whose age ia certain "^^ There was a young lady qr,.,„, â- Who had much trouble wit' 1 So she bought Carboline And a sight to be seen ' Is the head of this maiden ' __uii3_mauien, J 4„, V TWO BOniES CURED San Francisco Cal u H. R. Stevens, Boston, M^?Wi waa afflicted with a most diaa'p,'^! for several months, physicianRVS;?*'^! to tell me what it was. Dr Maji^^«i Lean, Dr. Hale and other well k« " "• cians in this city prescribinp fn "" calling it Nettle Itash, seme F Poison Oak, and others Salt Rv;„„ failed to give relief, and I became 'wl I could not sleep or attend to bTisiBi?*" bottlea of Vegetino have curedT* cheerfully recommend it as the 'v» w' "1 of Blocd Medicines. " '"sa R. F. FITZGKRU.D, i;,7 PcTcnih Canker Humor Cured Providf^nce, R. I. fy^ ir.-After'.j cured of ;i several hot Mr. H. H. Stevens: number cf rcn.edies, was Canker lluvior by takin-; Ve^etinc. Vo.irs. .l.KI;f;-UtCRA\D, Vegeline in England. HaHiax. X, .«..Dcc 13 f ir. R. Stevens, Esq,, Boston, Mass'l Sir.â€" I take pleasure in informing ymi have had occasion to use your we;) "Vegetine. For some time I felt rundoKiil too close application to business. I hj^J used two or three bottles of vonr popnJjtJ cine when I felt greutly invf^oratcd asta almost any kind of work in countcuonin'^i larso dry goods bussines?. '" My sister in England has been alIinf|J Nervous Prostration, il'tivt of Apjmi^ General Debility. 1 tcok l.cr a boisiec tine on my last visit, and sent her half si since. At last accounts the writea has greatly improved, and fce'.s as thoifil would soon be as weli as ever. I am suit J Vegetine would have a lart-c sale hi if introduced into that country. Believe mc youis vri--, tm'y. K.'T. iSAHOr Of Mahon Hro:=., Dry Gc.ods Jlercis Sympathy for the Nervouil Nervous Sufferer. A dose of Ve^elineii just before going to Led v.\\\ insurcj fortable night's rest to the nerrons ailtj m THE GREAT AN RE tna BKIGGS' GEXnXE ELECTRIC OIL Electricity feeds the brain and muscles â- â- word, it is Nature's food, ./^l^^P.^irio on voaaesses aU the qualities that it 13 possible to combine in a medicinn thereby Riving it a wide range of application aa an mtemal remedy for man and beMt. Th« happiest results follow ita uae and InNervout Diseases, such aa Rheumatism, Neuralgia ^d kindred diseases, it has no equaL *** ^«^ Thanks to a Nevida exchange for the in- tormation that the cinnamon bear has no t^Tey hed ST'" "^^ ^^' '""^^" '^^^ J. N. Sutherland,' E^aq!!'^^' " '^- 1882. su^?L|So-.J«*^^llt^J' i"w^l.r* ^«»' ed bj a neighbor to t^yoM cSe .^'!??«°d- tme." Idifso, andameliidtn«^it "®»*â„¢a- ly cured me. aAd I oa? now ^^^"k?"°P'«*«- complaint Giving youaSe^fh^Pl "»« "me asiOurUMnkflt. re^Vj^^'*^ ^^ " Mr. Clendening ia a faâ„¢er^RS^^^?*H"^G- ' about nine mil£8^f^mslâ„¢tea^ ^^"'• -,, CURES Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Headaclie, Toothache, Sore Throat, Swelllnem, Sprains, BraUcs Barna, Sealda, Froat BItea, ^^ IND ALL OTUER BODILV PAI.V8 AND ACIira. Soldby DrosgijU and Dealers eTerrwhere. Fiflj C«uu» bottle. DlreetioDB In II Languages. THE CHARLES A. VOGELEE CO. a° xo««oci 10 A. VOuSLtB A CO lUIUBorv, HlU, C. 8. A TTler q Cso n* Hspfc 6alieLad n-^ZtZT ^ZZ^^^ Bepartflient of EmlgratlonT' ' â- ^â- ^- S®"ler the north J of sec 1 T^lJii-M; W. is offered for $3.00 per aiâ„¢ *« 3?* ^^ l^ Soil the very beat, oiJy 2 mills Fiti,I2??. "re- main line C P r! a ..ii V®*.^'^Ofu Station Yonge 8t^«i?:?^o^nto ^^CilULLKN 449 ednow open in twtfertite t?^?"*^*^°'S ^^l- it8ettler8.imnK.v«m«Jffi'?fi:_?orUHt of Yegetine is Said b y All Brags IB USI N ESS~_ GHANOEl DRUG BUSINESS FOR SALE INll of IG.OOU population, doinscashtniij 5-G.509 annually, stock about JJ, 500. MiCD T OSH PETERS. Toronto. MILLINERY AM) FAN'CY GOODSI NESS for sale in thriving â- n-eEterac; 10,000 population stock about ?1.40C:ij class shape. MACKINXOSII 'EIEPS.I onto. _____ MERCHANT TAILOR'S JBUSIXES: sale in 'Torontoâ€" arst-clas3 stock I or cash about SI. 200. all available for i tr ade. MACKINTOSH PETERS, To r PLUMBING AND GAS FITTLVG NESS for sale in live western towno(i| population, having its gas works wor^s now being built): stock and tonlsj $1,000; rent low, MACKINTOSHl Toro n to. MILLINERY ANL M 4NTLE BUSH fo sale; a general merchant, in western village of 1,' 00 population, mthap country around, would bcil out thisbramii his business; stock about ?SCO; at lOcenBi dollar; largely available for comingseasi trade M ACKINTOSH A- PETER-'v Tgi MR.FORSTER. IRTIST.HAS RETUEM from Europo ani opened a s'lUM King-3L. East Portraits in oil life size. M I SO e LLA N EO U STI fl»C PER DA.\ can bo made br asrents.u* Q J o r fem ale. C VV. DENNIS, ToroiiM. RITBBEK ST.inp.S.-ADDREiSR. H.CJ1 4 King at. EASt.To :onl3. Ae;its^w5»| W" ATCHK* re'pairej. Trade workaspeal i^HKIS.SHEPPARn7Mi:iu WAtCHEl 13 Yoa?o Street. le caught his Sendforfn'r- iUubirutaiCijI I lo^-uctoKYiaE,t!ic.i.-w| Toron'o. Valentine and Kas.er in?l.J2;i' 55, or $10 luts. Hj- post pre-p- t BHOS.. ToromO:_ for t)ic Auto?W;| CARDS. H. J. MA TTHEW S 1 i\£\ Choice Selcrtioiio lui '•--,-,-,^1 ± VU Album and 6 Handeome Card5tor(W| 3-cent stamp. The CALL, Mattapan, JW-\ PRICK 'TICKETS," SHOW CARD3, ^^. DOW SHADES. Newest deai.ca?; *;' for price list. F. William s, i KmsJ;-J5!!^ ffiT AA FOR A WOKKING ViOm «I5X«ifl/ steam Engine. with lampcoaP-" C. P OTTE R. 31^ing-st.^ist, Toronto.,^ FARMS IN MARYLAND-IMPBOâ„¢f «10 to $2j per acre catalogues free- f: CHAMBERSj^t^cde^alsburgh, Jlajylani^;^ TltOOFIKCi MATEKIAis, 'CARPET A-; M\ Buildihg Papers, wholesiie and reW'j low price, at HODGE WILLIAJlB-ii" aide, S t., East, Toronto. --=s ONTARIO VETERINARY COLLEGR^ RONTO. Students cau C'^ter rroinU^ ber until Januarv. PROF. SMITH, *â- Edin. Pri ncipal. Fees, flftv dollars. AUT0PH6\ES, »6.50, incluuisg w,t^ tunes. T. CLAXTON. (icalcrin»"j^ Instruments. Piano Music, Band Mn9«- Catalogues free. 197 Yonge S t Toronw Patent eyelet, heavy ana very touib; smoot.|l OTeMnt8ettler8.improvMentB«ow~5^°'""«t o* full Information adS^ h^h nSP^»o°*°d torlaSt., Toronto. lSi^dg^^gg«'.l Vic- 55 agents. Director. Ontario; be^ wtl^??R^y»fe«««ho^ densely as to exclude the wJf?f^ 2*^' *nd so and delivered at ^l^ltett.; Pri». Packed 60 cents: 3 to 4 f«ot- »S, vtr ^latienâ€" 2 feet hiffh. S«okedlnrotiu^'tI^5W?lyJi»nIted;oSiSS 6both old and^ew vl^^ .; ****«»»evto^ 3«d for price MsI'^ri^^OHlJq^r.'S^'**^^ beUford l^urserics and vine?frJ1ffii^amp- JACS. ^i^^i^i.^:^ooii^ ^CO.. Printers, Toronto. RS. WOOD CO., OAKVILLE-:*^d( â- FACTURERS of Outside a" Tfj: Blinds, Sash, Doors, and Mouldings, w pric es, Oakville. Ont. ___â€" â€" f^ THOSE WISHING TO DISPOSE OF J purchase a businesa ef any "cscn^ r^ the city or elaewhere ahould call or BeDji^ culars to C. J. PALIN, 53 and 55 hM*^ East Business Agent andJValuer._^.--jjj CABTADIAFf MUTIJAl AID AS90f|;fZV Co-operative Life Assurance. Pâ„¢Vpi* ramUies in caseof death. W. Psube^H.^ Se c.. 87 King St. We st. Torento. ^fg^^-!^ lARM FOR SALE -BEING I^Lrf Gwillimbury, adjoining town of » m Landing 212 acres. NortherS R. R-, ^fT)i^ uated on comer of this Lot, the laol„B»' roUing clay loam Brick house 'tn^l -• ^^ J- ^- WHITNEY. K3 " 26 Tojronto-jt Toronto. S6.35 FOR 39„.Ta*». Any person sending ma 39 cents an" y,. dresses of 10 acquaintances will ref ';t Is* turn mail goods (not recipesnna' „,sir(KilJ Tnis Is aa honest offer to introduce staP^EVBT If you waut a fortune, act now. J- "â- ° P. O. Box 127. BuflTalo. N.Y. Estate F